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Inside
Project
2025’s
Secret
Training
Videos
by Andy
Kroll,
ProPublica,
and Nick
Surgey,
Documented
20–25
minutes
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Reporting
Highlights
Deep
State
Battle:
Project
2025’s
plan to
train an
army of
political
appointees
who
could
fight
the
so-called
deep
state on
behalf
of a
future
Trump
administration
remains
on
track.
New
Videos:
Dozens
of
never-before-published
videos
created
for
Project
2025
were
provided
to
ProPublica
and
Documented
by a
person
who had
access
to them.
Advice
Given:
“If the
American
people
elect a
conservative
president,
his
administration
will
have to
eradicate
climate
change
references
from
absolutely
everywhere.”
These
highlights
were
written
by the
reporters
and
editors
who
worked
on this
story.
Project
2025,
the
controversial
playbook
and
policy
agenda
for a
right-wing
presidential
administration,
has lost
its
director
and
faced
scathing
criticism
from
both
Democratic
groups
and
former
President
Donald
Trump.
But
Project
2025’s
plan to
train an
army of
political
appointees
who
could
battle
against
the
so-called
deep
state
government
bureaucracy
on
behalf
of a
future
Trump
administration
remains
on
track.
One
centerpiece
of that
program
is
dozens
of
never-before-published
videos
created
for
Project
2025’s
Presidential
Administration
Academy.
The vast
majority
of these
videos —
23 in
all,
totaling
more
than 14
hours of
content
— were
provided
to
ProPublica
and
Documented
by a
person
who had
access
to them.
The
Project
2025
videos
coach
future
appointees
on
everything
from the
nuts and
bolts of
governing
to how
to
outwit
bureaucrats.
There
are
strategies
for
avoiding
embarrassing
Freedom
of
Information
Act
disclosures
and
ensuring
that
conservative
policies
aren’t
struck
down by
“left-wing
judges.”
Some of
the
content
is
routine
advice
that any
incoming
political
appointee
might be
told.
Other
segments
of the
training
offer
guidance
on
radically
changing
how the
federal
government
works
and what
it does.
In one
video,
Bethany
Kozma, a
conservative
activist
and
former
deputy
chief of
staff at
the U.S.
Agency
for
International
Development
in the
Trump
administration,
downplays
the
seriousness
of
climate
change
and says
the
movement
to
combat
it is
really
part of
a ploy
to
“control
people.”
“If the
American
people
elect a
conservative
president,
his
administration
will
have to
eradicate
climate
change
references
from
absolutely
everywhere,”
Kozma
says.
In the
same
video,
Kozma
calls
the idea
of
gender
fluidity
“evil.”
Another
speaker,
Katie
Sullivan,
who was
an
acting
assistant
attorney
general
at the
Department
of
Justice
under
Trump,
takes
aim at
executive
actions
by the
administration
of
President
Joe
Biden
that
created
gender
adviser
positions
throughout
the
federal
government.
The
goal,
Biden
wrote in
one
order,
was to
“advance
equal
rights
and
opportunities,
regardless
of
gender
or
gender
identity.”
Sullivan
says,
“That
position
has to
be
eradicated,
as well
as all
the task
forces,
the
removal
of all
the
equity
plans
from all
the
websites,
and a
complete
rework
of the
language
in
internal
and
external
policy
documents
and
grant
applications.”
Trump
has
tried to
distance
himself
from
Project
2025,
falsely
saying
that he
knew
nothing
about it
and had
“no idea
who is
behind
it.” In
fact, he
flew on
a
private
jet with
Kevin
Roberts,
president
of the
Heritage
Foundation,
which
leads
Project
2025.
And in a
2022
speech
at a
Heritage
Foundation
event,
Trump
said,
“This is
a great
group
and
they’re
going to
lay the
groundwork
and
detail
plans
for
exactly
what our
movement
will do
and what
your
movement
will do
when the
American
people
give us
a
colossal
mandate
to save
America.”
A review
of the
training
videos
shows
that 29
of the
36
speakers
have
worked
for
Trump in
some
capacity
— on his
2016-17
transition
team, in
the
administration
or on
his 2024
reelection
campaign.
The
videos
appear
to have
been
recorded
before
the
resignation
two
weeks
ago of
Paul
Dans,
the
leader
of the
2025
project,
and they
are
referenced
on the
project’s
website.
The
Heritage
Foundation
said in
a
statement
at the
time of
Dans’
resignation
that it
would
end
Project
2025’s
policy-related
work,
but that
its
“collective
efforts
to build
a
personnel
apparatus
for
policymakers
of all
levels —
federal,
state,
and
local —
will
continue.”
The
Heritage
Foundation
and most
of the
people
who
appear
in the
videos
cited in
this
story
did not
respond
to
ProPublica’s
repeated
requests
for
comment.
Karoline
Leavitt,
a
spokesperson
for the
Trump
campaign
who
features
in one
of the
videos,
said,
“As our
campaign
leadership
and
President
Trump
have
repeatedly
stated,
Agenda
47 is
the only
official
policy
agenda
from our
campaign.”
Project
2025’s
887-page
“Mandate
for
Leadership”
document
lays out
a vast
array of
policy
and
governance
proposals,
including
eliminating
the
Department
of
Education,
slashing
Medicaid,
reclassifying
tens of
thousands
of
career
civil
servants
so they
could be
more
easily
fired
and
replaced,
giving
the
president
greater
power to
control
the DOJ
and
further
restricting
abortion
access.
Democrats
and
liberal
groups
have
criticized
the
project’s
policy
agenda
as
“extreme”
and
“authoritarian”
while
pointing
out the
many
connections
between
Trump
and the
hundreds
of
people
who
contributed
to the
project.
“Trump’s
attempts
to
distance
himself
from
Project
2025
have
always
been
disingenuous,”
said
Noah
Bookbinder,
president
of the
watchdog
group
Citizens
for
Responsibility
and
Ethics
in
Washington.
“The
discovery
that the
vast
majority
of
speakers
in
Project
2025
training
videos
are
alumni
of the
Trump
administration
or have
other
close
ties to
Trump’s
political
operation
is
unsurprising
further
evidence
of the
close
connection
there.”
Several
speakers
in the
videos
acknowledge
that the
Trump
administration
was
slowed
by
staffing
challenges
and the
inexperience
of its
political
appointees,
and they
offer
lessons
learned
from
their
stumbles.
Some of
the
advice
appears
at odds
with
conservative
dogma,
including
a
suggestion
that the
next
administration
may need
to
expand
key
government
agencies
to
achieve
the
larger
goal of
slashing
federal
regulations.
Rick
Dearborn,
who
helped
lead
Trump’s
2016
transition
team and
later
served
in the
Trump
White
House as
deputy
chief of
staff,
recalled
in one
video
how
“tough”
it was
to find
people
to fill
all of
the key
positions
in the
early
days of
the
administration.
The
personnel
part of
Project
2025 is
“so
important
to the
next
president,”
Dearborn
says.
“Establishing
all of
this,
providing
the
expertise,
looking
at a
database
of folks
that can
be part
of the
administration,
talking
to you
like we
are
right
now
about
what is
a
transition
about,
why do I
want to
be
engaged
in it,
what
would my
role be
— that’s
a luxury
that we
didn’t
have,”
referring
to a
database
of
potential
political
appointees.
Dan
Huff, a
former
legal
adviser
in the
White
House
Presidential
Personnel
Office
under
Trump,
says in
another
video
that
future
appointees
should
be
prepared
to enact
significant
changes
in
American
government
and be
ready to
face
blowback
when
they do.
“If
you’re
not on
board
with
helping
implement
a
dramatic
course
correction
because
you’re
afraid
it’ll
damage
your
future
employment
prospects,
it’ll
harm you
socially
— look,
I get
it,”
Huff
says.
“That’s
a real
danger.
It’s a
real
thing.
But
please:
Do us
all a
favor
and sit
this one
out.”
Credit:
Obtained
by
ProPublica
and
Documented
“Eradicate
Climate
Change
References”
The
project’s
experts
outline
regulatory
and
policy
changes
that
future
political
appointees
should
prepare
for in a
Republican
administration.
One
video,
titled
“Hidden
Meanings:
The
Monsters
in the
Attic,”
is a
50-minute
discussion
of
supposed
left-wing
code
words
and
biased
language
that
future
appointees
should
be aware
of and
root
out. In
that
video,
Kozma
says
that
U.S.
intelligence
agencies
have
named
climate
change
as an
increasingly
dire
threat
to
global
stability,
which,
she
says,
illustrates
how the
issue
“has
infiltrated
every
part of
the
federal
government.”
Credit:
Obtained
by
ProPublica
and
Documented
She then
tells
viewers
that she
sees
climate
change
as
merely a
cover to
engage
in
population
control.
“I think
about
the
people
who
don’t
want you
to have
children
because
of the”
— here
she
makes
air-quotes
—
“impact
on the
environment.”
She
adds,
“This is
part of
their
ultimate
goal to
control
people.”
Later in
the
video,
Katie
Sullivan,
the
former
acting
assistant
attorney
general
under
Trump,
advocates
for
removing
so-called
critical
race
theory
from
public
education
without
saying
how the
federal
government
would
accomplish
that.
(Elementary
and
secondary
education
curricula
are
typically
set at
the
state
and
local
level,
not by
the
federal
government.)
“The
noxious
tenets
of
critical
race
theory
and
gender
ideology
should
be
excised
from
curriculum
in every
single
public
school
in this
country,”
Sullivan
says.
(Reached
by
phone,
Sullivan
told
ProPublica
to
contact
her
press
representative
and hung
up. A
representative
did not
respond.)
Credit:
Obtained
by
ProPublica
and
Documented
In a
different
video,
David
Burton,
an
economic
policy
expert
at the
Heritage
Foundation,
discusses
the
importance
of an
obscure
yet
influential
agency
called
the
Office
of
Information
and
Regulatory
Affairs.
The
Trump
administration
used
OIRA to
help
roll
back
regulations
on
economic,
fiscal
and
environmental
issues.
Under
Biden,
OIRA
took a
more
aggressive
stance
in
helping
review
and
shape
new
regulations,
which
included
efforts
to
combat
housing
discrimination,
ban the
sale of
so-called
ghost
guns and
set new
renewable
fuel
targets.
Burton,
in the
Project
2025
video,
urges
future
political
appointees
to work
in OIRA
and
argues
that the
office
should
“increase
its
staffing
levels
considerably”
in
service
of the
conservative
goal of
reining
in the
so-called
administrative
state,
namely
the
federal
agencies
that
craft
and
issue
new
regulations.
“Fifty
people
are not
enough
to
adequately
police
the
regulatory
actions
of the
entire
federal
government,”
Burton
says.
“OIRA is
one of
the few
government
agencies
that
limits
the
regulatory
ambitions
of other
agencies.”
(Burton
confirmed
in a
brief
interview
that he
appeared
in the
video
and
endorsed
expanding
OIRA’s
staffing
levels.)
Credit:
Obtained
by
ProPublica
and
Documented
Expanding
the
federal
workforce
— even
an
office
tasked
with
scrutinizing
regulations
— would
seem to
cut
against
the
conservative
movement’s
long-standing
goal of
shrinking
government.
For
anyone
confused
by
Project
2025’s
insistence
that a
conservative
president
should
fill all
appointee
slots
and
potentially
grow
certain
functions,
Spencer
Chretien,
a former
Trump
White
House
aide who
is now
Project
2025’s
associate
director,
addresses
the
tension
in one
video.
“Some on
the
right
even say
that we,
because
we
believe
in small
government,
should
just
lead by
example
and not
fill
certain
political
positions,”
Chretien
says. “I
suggest
that it
would be
almost
impossible
to bring
any
conservative
change
to
America
if the
president
did
that.”
A Trump
Government-in-Waiting
The
speakers
in the
Project
2025
videos
are
careful
not to
explicitly
side
with
Trump or
talk
about
what a
future
Trump
administration
might
do. They
instead
refer to
a future
“conservative
president”
or
“conservative
administration.”
But the
links
between
the
speakers
in the
videos
and
Trump
are
many.
Most of
those
served
Trump
during
his
administration,
working
at the
White
House,
the
National
Security
Council,
NASA,
the
Office
of
Management
and
Budget,
USAID
and the
departments
of
Justice,
Interior,
State,
Homeland
Security,
Transportation
and
Health
and
Human
Services.
Another
speaker
has
worked
in the
Senate
office
of J.D.
Vance,
Trump’s
2024
running
mate.
Sullivan,
the
former
DOJ
acting
assistant
attorney
general
in
charge
of the
department’s
Office
of
Justice
Programs,
which
oversees
billions
in grant
funding,
appears
in three
different
videos.
Leavitt,
who is
in a
training
video
titled
“The Art
of
Professionalism,”
worked
in the
White
House
press
office
during
Trump’s
first
presidency
and is
now the
national
press
secretary
for his
reelection
campaign.
A
consistent
theme in
the
advice
and
testimonials
offered
by these
Trump
alums is
that
Project
2025
trainees
should
expect a
hostile
reception
if they
go to
work in
the
federal
government.
Kozma,
the
former
USAID
deputy
chief of
staff,
says in
one
video
that
“many”
of her
fellow
Trump
appointees
experienced
“persecution”
during
their
time in
government.
In a
video
titled
“The
Political
Appointee’s
Survival
Guide,”
Max
Primorac,
a former
deputy
administrator
at USAID
during
the
Trump
administration,
warns
viewers
that
Washington
is a
place
that
“does
not
share
your
conservative
values,”
and that
new
hires
will
find
that
“there’s
so much
hostility
to basic
traditional
values.”
Credit:
Obtained
by
ProPublica
and
Documented
In the
same
video,
Kristen
Eichamer,
a former
deputy
press
secretary
at the
Trump-era
NASA,
says
that the
media
pushed
false
narratives
about
then-President
Trump
and
people
who
worked
in his
administration.
“Being
defamed
on
Twitter
is
almost a
badge of
honor in
the
Trump
administration,”
she
says.
Outthinking
“the
Left”
The
videos
also
offer
less
overtly
political
tutorials
for
future
appointees,
covering
everything
from how
a
regulation
gets
made to
working
with the
media,
the
mechanics
of a
presidential
transition
process
to
obtaining
a
security
clearance,
and best
practices
for time
management.
One
recurring
theme in
the
videos
is how
the next
Republican
administration
can
avoid
the
mistakes
of the
first
Trump
presidency.
In one
video,
Roger
Severino,
the
former
director
of the
Office
of Civil
Rights
in the
Trump-era
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services,
explains
that
failure
to
meticulously
follow
federal
procedure
led to
courts
delaying
or
throwing
out
certain
regulatory
efforts
on
technical
grounds.
Severino,
who is
also a
longtime
leader
in the
anti-abortion
movement,
goes on
to walk
viewers
through
the ins
and outs
of
procedural
law and
says
that
they
should
prepare
for “the
left” to
use
every
tool
possible
to
derail
the next
conservative
president.
“This is
a game
of 3D
chess,”
Severino
says.
“You
have to
be
always
anticipating
what the
left is
going to
do to
try to
throw
sand in
the
gears
and trip
you up
and
block
your
rule.”
(In an
email,
Severino
said he
would
forward
ProPublica’s
interview
request
to
Heritage’s
spokespeople,
who did
not
respond.)
Operating
under
the
assumption
that
some
career
employees
might
seek to
thwart a
future
conservative
president’s
agenda,
some of
the
advice
pertains
to how
political
appointees
can
avoid
being
derailed
or
bogged
down by
the
government
bureaucrats
who work
with
them.
Sullivan
urges
viewers
to
“empower
your
political
staff,”
limit
access
to
appointees’
calendars
and
leave
out
career
staff
from
early
meetings
with
more
senior
agency
officials.
“You are
making
it clear
to
career
staff
that
your
political
appointees
are in
charge,”
Sullivan
says.
Other
tips
from the
videos
include
scrubbing
personal
social
media
accounts
of any
content
that’s
“damaging,
vulgar
or
contradict
the
policies
you are
there to
implement”
well
before
the new
administration
begins,
as Kozma
put it.
Alexei
Woltornist,
a former
assistant
secretary
for
public
affairs
at the
Department
of
Homeland
Security,
encourages
future
appointees
to
bypass
mainstream
news
outlets
like The
New York
Times
and The
Washington
Post.
Instead,
they
should
focus on
conservative
media
outlets
because
those
are the
only
outlets
conservative
voters
trust.
“The
American
people
who vote
for a
conservative
presidential
administration,
they’re
not
reading
The New
York
Times,
they’re
not
reading
The
Washington
Post,”
Woltornist
says.
“To the
contrary,
if those
outlets
publish
something,
they’re
going to
assume
it’s
false.
So the
only way
to reach
them
with any
voice of
credibility
is
through
working
with
conservative
media
outlets.”
Credit:
Obtained
by
ProPublica
and
Documented
And in a
video
about
oversight
and
investigations,
a group
of
conservative
investigators
advise
future
appointees
on how
to avoid
creating
a paper
trail of
sensitive
communications
that
could be
obtained
by
congressional
committees
or
outside
groups
under
the
Freedom
of
Information
Act.
“If you
need to
resolve
something,
if you
can do
it, it’s
probably
better
to walk
down the
hall,
buttonhole
a guy
and say,
‘Hey,
what are
we going
to do
here?’
Talk
through
the
decision,”
says Tom
Jones, a
former
Senate
investigator
who now
runs the
American
Accountability
Foundation.
Credit:
Obtained
by
ProPublica
and
Documented
Jones
adds
that
it’s
possible
that
agency
lawyers
could
cite
exemptions
in the
public-records
law to
prevent
the
release
of
certain
documents.
But
appointees
are best
served,
he
argues,
if they
don’t
put
important
communications
in
writing
in the
first
place.
“You’re
probably
better
off,”
Jones
says,
“going
down to
the
canteen,
getting
a cup of
coffee,
talking
it
through
and
making
the
decision,
as
opposed
to
sending
him an
email
and
creating
a thread
that
Accountable.US
or one
of those
other
groups
is going
to come
back and
seek.”
Do you
have any
information
about
Project
2025
that we
should
know?
Andy
Kroll
can be
reached
by email
at
andy.kroll@propublica.org
and by
Signal
or
WhatsApp
at
202-215-6203.
Videos
prepared
by Lisa
Riordan
Seville
and
Chris
Morran.
Mariam
Elba
contributed
research.
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