It seems like Project 2025 is everywhere. But what is it?
Former President Donald Trump wants to distance himself from Project 2025, while the Biden campaign is doing everything it can to tie Trump to the conservative plan to transform the American government.
“I know nothing about Project 2025,” Trump wrote on his social media website Truth Social. “I have no idea who is behind it. I disagree with some of the things they’re saying and some of the things they’re saying are absolutely ridiculous and abysmal. Anything they do, I wish them luck, but I have nothing to do with them.”
The 900-page plan, pulled together by the prominent conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation, serves as a conservative guidebook to expand presidential powers and overhaul the federal workforce so that it can be replaced with partisan loyalists.
It’s not Trump’s plan, but it is a plan made for Trump, who leaders have described as the “embodiment” of their efforts. And it outlines legal pathways Trump could take to implement some of his biggest policy goals.
Project 2025 also outlines transition and recruitment plans to help ensure Trump does not repeat some of the mistakes made early in his first administration when his team was caught unprepared to staff and take over the government from the outgoing Obama administration.
“If we learned anything from President Trump's 2016 presidential transition effort, it wasn't as smooth as others,” said Ryan Williams, who worked for Mitt Romney on his 2012 presidential campaign. “Usually, presidential campaigns have fully functioning transition operations ready to go.”
While Trump has sought to deny a connection, there is plenty of overlap between Project 2025 and his agenda.
It proposes mass deportations of millions of undocumented immigrants. So does Trump.
Trump has called for cuts to the federal agencies like the Department of Education. Project 2025 calls for its elimination.
But, there are also differences.
On abortion, for example, Project 2025 goes farther with restrictions than Trump has said he would go.
Trump blasted the plan last week, days after the president of the Heritage Foundation, Kevin Roberts, warned of the potential for political violence.
“We are in the process of the second American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the left allows it to be,” Roberts said on the conservative podcast The War Room.
Democrats pounced, immediately seeing an opportunity to point to Robert’s comments as an example of the dangers of a second Trump administration.
“248 years ago tomorrow America declared independence from a tyrannical king, and now Donald Trump and his allies want to make him one at our expense,” James Singer, a spokesperson for the Biden campaign said ahead of the Fourth of July.
The campaign has also launched ads and created a website tying Trump to Project 2025.
Biden got some political help from Taraji P. Henson, who warned about Project 2025 — on stage — when she hosted the BET awards.
“Pay attention,” she said. “It’s not a secret: Look it up. They are attacking our most vulnerable citizens. The Project 2025 plan is not a game. Look it up!”
The critical focus on Project 2025 has been a small sliver of good political news for the Biden team in an otherwise rough period of endless attention on Biden’s bad debate performance and questions about whether he would remain the Democratic nominee.
The Trump campaign continues to push back.
Senior Trump adviser Danielle Alvarez pointed out that the campaign has been saying for months that these outside groups do not speak for them.
She accused Biden of trying to distract from questions about his mental acuity and staying power.
She stressed that the campaign has its own policy proposals, Agenda 47, and the Republican platform.
“And so Democrats are desperate,” she said. “And they're throwing a Hail Mary attempting to talk about outside groups as though they are President Trump's policy positions.”