During the campaign, Democrats continually drew attention to the radical proposals of Project 2025 as the agenda for a second Trump term. Trump distanced himself from Project 2025 and pretended to know nothing about it or anyone who wrote it. Now that he is President-elect, Project 2025 is indeed Trump’s agenda.
Someone on social media asked, “If Trump disavowed Project 2025 when campaigning, isn’t I clear that he has no “mandate” to act on it?
The LA Times reports:
Russell Vought, one of the chief architects of Project 2025 — a conservative blueprint for the next presidency — is no fan of the federal government that President-elect Donald Trump will soon lead.
He believes “woke” civil servants and “so-called expert authorities” wield illegitimate power to block conservative White House directives from deep within federal agencies, and wants Trump to “bend or break” that bureaucracy to his will, he wrote in the second chapter of the Project 2025 playbook.
Vought is a vocal proponent of a plan known as Schedule F, under which Trump would fire thousands of career civil servants with extensive experience in their fields and replace them with his own political loyalists, and of Christian nationalism, which would see American governance aligned with Christian teachings. Both are core tenets of Project 2025.
Throughout his campaign, Trump adamantly disavowed Project 2025, even though its policies overlapped with his and some of its authors worked in his first administration. He castigated anyone who suggested the blueprint, which polls showed was deeply unpopular among voters, represented his aims for the presidency.
But last week, the president-elect nominated Vought to lead the Office of Management and Budget, which oversees the White House budget and its policy agenda across the federal government.
Trump called Vought, who held the same role during his first term, an “aggressive cost cutter and deregulator” who “knows exactly how to dismantle the Deep State and end Weaponized Government.”
The nomination was one of several Trump has made since his election that have called into question his claims on the campaign trail that Project 2025 was not his playbook and held no sway over him or his plans for a second term.
He selected Tom Homan, a Project 2025 contributor and former visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation, the conservative organization behind the blueprint, as his “border czar.” Trump named Stephen Miller, an immigration hard-liner also linked to Project 2025, as his deputy chief of staff for policy. Both also served in the first Trump administration.
He also named Brendan Carr to serve on the Federal Communications Commission. Carr wrote a chapter of Project 2025 on the FCC, which regulates U.S. internet access and TV and radio networks, and has echoed Trump’s claimsthat news broadcasters have engaged in political bias against Trump.
Trump named John Ratcliffe as his pick for CIA director and Pete Hoekstra as ambassador to Canada. Both are Project 2025 contributors. It has also been reported that the Trump transition team is filling lower-level government spots using a Project 2025 database of conservative candidates.
During the campaign Trump said that he knew “nothing about” Project 2025 and that he found some of its ideas “absolutely ridiculous and abysmal.” In response to news in July that Project 2025’s director, Paul Dans, was leaving his post, Trump campaign managers Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles — whom the president-elect has since named his chief of staff — issued a statement saying that “reports of Project 2025’s demise would be greatly welcomed.”
Asked about Trump’s selection of several people with Project 2025 connections to serve in his administration, Trump transition spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt responded with a statement, saying Trump “never had anything to do with Project 2025.”
“This has always been a lie pushed by the Democrats and the legacy media, but clearly the American people did not buy it because they overwhelmingly voted for President Trump to implement the promises that he made on the campaign trail,” Leavitt wrote. “All of President Trump’s cabinet nominees and appointments are whole-heartedly committed to President Trump’s agenda, not the agenda of outside groups.”
Leavitt too has ties to Project 2025, having appeared in a training video for it.
In addition to calling for much greater power in the hands of the president, Project 2025 calls for less federal intervention in certain areas — including through the elimination of the Department of Education. It calls for much stricter immigration enforcement and mass deportations — a policy priority of Trump’s as well — and rails against environmental protections, calling for the demolition of key environmental agencies such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the National Weather Service.
It calls for tougher restrictions on abortion and for the federal government to collect data on women who seek an abortion, and backs a slew of measures that would strip rights from LGBTQ+ people.
For Trump’s critics, his selections make it clear that his disavowal of the conservative playbook was nothing more than a campaign ploy to pacify voters who viewed the plan as too far to the right. It’s an argument many were making before the election as well.

This is completely unsurprising. Trump’s policies are likely to damage his voters more than most. I hope they get what they voted for. (I’ll keep repeating this. I’ve already had a couple of Trumpers express second thoughts.)
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Trump continues to remind me of middle school students: “Oh, I said that? My bad.” Then someone steps in and says, “Here’s what he means…” Then he makes up words, “…yeah, I invented the word “groceries” what a word — lettuce, tomato, bacon — ah, groceries. See how I did that? I went from child care to groceries and then to dogs and cats and wearing a “Oompa Loompa” vest. That’s how I “interpose” and weave. Just brilliant.” Project 2025, huh? I wish them well though. Let’s see what else I can crush, oh, social security, medicare, and free tax filing. Yeah, let’s squeeze ’em so much they can’t move. See that’s how I will be your protector. I love you people. The stupid people. I could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and you all would still vote for me. As Peter Finch said (along with I am mad as hell), “We know things are bad – worse than bad. They’re crazy. It’s like everything everywhere is going crazy, so we don’t go out anymore. We sit in the house, and slowly the world we are living in is getting smaller, and all we say is, ‘Please, at least leave us alone in our living rooms.” On another note, I stumbled upon this; it is worth the watch and listen. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRBPBBtKmjs&t=30s PS: I was out shopping and (I keep track of prices) and corporations are already raising costs. Coffee, gum, eggs (yes the eggs are more expensive) and all sorts of other products have gone up by dollars. But I watched LOADS of shopping carts filled moving about. The economy is sooo bad, right? Makes it hard on a guy living on a fixed income, but as always, I just stop buying what is not essential. Thanks for letting me journal. Peace to you in your lives.
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trump didn’t acknowledge Project 2025 because he didn’t get to name it! He coined the term Agenda47….which was just Project 2025 with a trump spin on it. You have to admit, the “TRUMP” brand seems to sell!
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We can definitely trust those sober mature Project2025 folks who maintain that a serial raping, fraudulent, tax dodging, prevaricating insurrectionist is the Great Sky Faerie’s personal choice to lead America into the new Golden Age. Sounds reasonable.
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I will give Trump one thing: he certainly has not read Project 2025. He has not read anything.
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Excuse the redundancy, but if Trump is talking, he’s lying.
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Like I said in print many times before the election. The only way Trump could win is to lie and cheat.
And those endless lies is the same as cheating. Trump’s campaing was built on his repeated lies.
The only truth that came out of his mouth was when he said he’d be a dictator on day one. He never said he wouldn’t be a dictator on day two.
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During the campaign, he promised to bring down the cost of groceries. Now he says he can’t.
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We have a dementia patient as President and have had it for many years, and the entire media covered it up. The Democratic party covered it up. Kamala Harris covered it up. Barack Hussein Obama covered it up. Biden’s Cabinet covered it up. So? We won’t be lectured by your lot about lies. I’ve been on the record on this blog that Project 2025 is excellent, so I’m ecstatic that DJT is embracing its ideas.
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When I saw a reference to dementia, my immediate thought was that you referred to Trump.
I would prefer Biden on his worst day to Trump on his best day.
Let me know, Jackie, when DJT cuts your Social Security and your Medicare.
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“This has always been a lie pushed by the Democrats and the legacy media, but clearly the American people did not buy it because they overwhelmingly voted for President Trump“
Ha ha ha ha ha! Talk about lying. . . overwhelmingly???. . . ha ha ha ha ha!
But hey when one is a tRump cultista whatever the leader says is the absolute truth. . . not that the leader has ever been anywhere near “truth”.
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