Project 2025 Status
The proposed radical gutting to realign USAID’s mission, funding, and international programs to strictly reflect a neo-conservative, pro-life, Christian Bible-centered agenda is sweeping, and stands to have major impacts on key sectors, including economic, public health, education, environmental, relief and refugee, among others, including pluralism and democracy. It would strip US funding and support away from, among others, international and local aid agencies that now serve the most vulnerable populations in societies. The potential negative global impacts are enormous, given the current impact and influence of US assistance via USAID programs.
While the author praises PEPFAR for its successful “localization” scale-up funding of effective country-based HIV prevention and care programs, the veiled reference to cutting funds for programs that fail to adhere to a conservative agenda poses a veiled threat to current Biden PEPFAR programs and policies found to be most effective, that are tailored to educate and support vulnerable Key Populations, including LGBTQ+ individuals, sex workers, women and families, those living in poverty, including displaced, unhoused, and refugee populations. The internal restructuring of authority at USAID, including in procurement and policy management, and proposed use of Schedule F in the Excepted Services, is in line with Project 2025’s broad mission to rapidly place a corps of dedicated loyalists who may lack civil service experience to carry out conservative proposals, using novel legal and policy instruments. The result would be an unvetted, unelected team of Christian conservatives at USAID with possibly limited government experience, tasked to advance their extremist Christian pro-life foreign policy and foreign aid agenda, aided by private sector and aligned faith groups they fund.
USAID leads the US government’s international development and disaster assistance programs. Here, Primorac lays out a radical reordering of the agency to reverse, on Day One of a new Administration, “the gross misuse of foreign aid by the current Administration to promote a radical ideology that is politically divisive at home and harms our global standing.” Biden has “decoupled US assistance from free-market reforms that are the keystone of economic and political stability,” Primorac charges.
Project 2025 calls for a radical overhaul to make USAID a pro-life agency, staffed with conservatives, funding only local NGOs and international programs aligned with pro-life values and priority conservative foreign policy objectives, and actively seeking to fund aligned faith- based groups. Primorac calls for returning to the approach begun by Trump, to cut back on USAID’s foreign aid, and instead, encourage countries to be self-reliant, while promoting international religious freedom as a pillar of the agency work and fighting reforms related to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Trump restructured the agency to provide grants to local faith- based organizations, and implemented USAID reforms to promote conservative Christian pro-life and pro-family policies. Project 2025 would go much further and deeper to extend this.
Proposals include:
Climate policy funding reversals: Under Biden, USAID declared itself a climate agency that “has incorporated its radical climate policy into every USAID initiative,” states Primorac, and redirected its private-sector engagement strategy to shift away from fossil fuels to renewable energy. He proposes a sharp reversal of course for the next Administration, arguing that, globally, “the financial resources needed to transition away from fossil fuels are unachievable”
Climate proposals include:
Eliminate funding for DEI policies: Primorac levies vitriol at the integration of DEI reforms and policies throughout USAID’s structure, including creation of DEI committees and adoption of an agency-wide DEI dashboard and scorecard for its bureaus, missions, and offices. “The upshot has been to racialize the agency and create a hostile work environment for anyone who disagrees with the Biden Administration’s identity politics,” writes Primorac, calling for complete dismantling of the DEI policy apparatus.
DEI proposals:
Anti-gender reforms: Primorac critiques USAID’s support for sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights, “gender equality,” and “women’s empowerment” and advocacy for individuals who claim minority status or vulnerability. That is a guise for promoting abortion, gay rights, and race-based DEI policies, he suggests. He calls for replacing current officials who head USAID’s gender offices with pro-life political appointees, and revising agency regulations to reflect pro-life values with a focus on family.
Proposed reforms:
Pro-Life Proposals: Arguing that “protecting life” should be among the core objectives of United States foreign assistance, Primorac says that promotion of pro-life policies must be a key goal of USAID’s work. He calls for reinstating the “Protecting Life in Global Health Assistance (PLGHA) policy,” – known as the Mexico City Policy – that Biden then revoked.
The PLGHA requires foreign NGOs to agree to not perform, or actively promote, abortion in foreign countries as a condition of receiving US assistance. Trump expanded the Mexico City Policy to “global health assistance furnished by all departments or agencies” estimated to total $8.8 billion annually.
Biden also restored funding to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) which had been taken away due to its support for women’s reproductive health. Primorac argues international NGOs who support abortion continue to receive US government funding and benefit from loopholes in laws that conservatives must act to close with new legislation. They should also rescind President Biden’s memorandum entitled “Protecting Women’s Health at Home and Abroad,” issued on January 28, 2021, and continue to apply the Helms Amendment, which forbids the use of US taxpayer dollars for abortion.
Religious freedom: Conservatives consider “international religious freedom” to be central to USAID’s development efforts, but the Biden administration has resisted that, states Primorac.
To do that, USAID should:
PEPFAR: The President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) is given high marks for “localization” – successfully and rapidly scaling up its HIV and health programs. The PEPFAR model should be replicated, states Primorac, including its data reporting system that supports transparency. He also calls for:
“All new programs in Africa should build on existing local initiatives that enjoy the support of the African people,” the author states – a veiled reference to supporting pro-life issues but not pro-choice policies or issues such as gender or LGTBQ+ equality.
WHO, UN: The next conservative Administration should designate a political appointee to help coordinate cross-agency efforts to hold the US government’s multilateral partners (UN and WHO agencies and other international organizations) accountable to financial and programmatic benchmarks, “including assurances that language promoting abortion will be removed from UN documents, policy statements, and technical literature,” states Primorac.
Humanitarian Assistance Primorac argues that humanitarian assistance for natural or man-made disasters has morphed into a pseudo-aid industry that is propped up by ongoing crises.
Proposed Reforms:
Other proposals:
On ‘Day One,’ USAID should halt all agency-wide training and put in place modules reflecting the new Administration’s policies
On Schedule F with the Excepted Service: Make USAID “one of the agencies to pilot-test a reinstated Executive Order 13957,16 which created a Schedule F within the Excepted Service:
Assure political appointees in the Bureau for Legislative and Public Affairs (combined with hires under Schedule A) review and edit USAID’s public-facing web pages and social media accounts to eliminate material not conforming to Administration’s policies
Shift USAID policy-making authority from the Bureau for Policy, Planning to the Office of Budget and Resource Management (BRM), located in the Office of the Administrator, and staffed by political appointees
Make rapid staffing of key positions at the Bureau for Democracy, Development, and Innovation (DDI) a high priority. The DDI oversees USAID’s non-health, non- humanitarian funding