(Redirected from Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation)
The 'Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation', based in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is a large
foundation with about half a billion
US dollars in assets. According to the Bradley Foundation 1998 Annual Report, it gives away more than $30 million per year. The Foundation has financed efforts to support
federal institutes, publications and
school choice and educational projects.
History
When
Rockwell International Corporation bought
Allen-Bradley in
1985, a significant portion of the proceeds went into the creation of The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. The organization was founded in an attempt to preserve and extend the principles and philosophy used by the Bradley brothers.
During their life they were committed to preserving and defending the tradition of free representative government and private enterprise. According to them, "the good society is a free society. The Bradley Foundation is likewise devoted to strengthening American democratic capitalism and the institutions, principles and values that sustain and nurture it."
The foundation supports
limited government, conceived of as a dynamic marketplace where economic, intellectual, and cultural activity can flourish. It states that it defends American ideas and institutions. Next to that it recognizes that responsible self government depends on informing citizens and creating a well informed public opinion. The foundation tries to accomplish that by financing scholarly studies and academic achievements.
[1]
The Bradley Foundation's former president,
Michael S. Joyce, was instrumental in creating the
Philanthropy Roundtable. The goal of the Roundtable's founders was to provide a forum where donors could discuss the principles and practices that inform the best of America's charitable tradition. Currently, there are more than 600 Roundtable Associates.
In the early
1990s the foundation helped support ''
The American Spectator'', which at the time was researching damaging material on President
Bill Clinton. In the March 1992 issue of the magazine,
David Brock called
Anita Hill "a bit nutty and a bit slutty", and in January, 1994, it published Brock's article regarding
Troopergate and Clinton's alleged extramarital affairs.
David Brock later recanted both articles.
The Bradley Foundation has provided funding for the
Project for a New American Century (PNAC). PNAC brought together prominent members of the (George W) Bush Administration (
Dick Cheney,
Donald Rumsfeld,
Richard Perle,
Paul Wolfowitz) in the late 1990s to articulate their
neoconservative foreign policy, including sending a letter to President
Bill Clinton urging him to invade
Iraq.
Criticism
People for the American Way alleges that the Bradley Foundations under-reports its giving to right-wing organizations.
[2]
Between 1985 and 1991, it was one of five foundations to fund the
George C. Marshall Institute, a known
Global Warming skeptic.
Phil Wilayto, former coordinator of A Job is a Right Campaign in Milwaukee and a contributor to
MediaTransparency, a progressive Web site that tracks the funding of right-wing politics, writes:
:The overall objective of the Bradley Foundation, however, is to return the U.S. -- and the world -- to the days before governments began to regulate Big Business, before corporations were forced to make concessions to an
organized labor force. In other words,
laissez-faire capitalism: capitalism with the gloves off.
Wilayto also published a 140-page report on the Bradley Foundation, ''The Feeding Trough,'' on behalf of the "A Job is a Right Campaign" in Milwaukee. The report claims the Bradley Foundation commissioned the studies that supported the welfare reform legislation in Wisconsin, which he contends harmed the state's poor residents. He also claimed the Bradley Foundation exploits Milwaukee's black community.
Governance
Current members of the
board of directors of the Bradley Foundation are:
William Armstrong,
Reed Coleman,
Terry Considine,
Pierre du Pont,
Michael Grebe,
Thomas Smallwood,
Bob Smith, and
David Uihlein.
Past and present grantees
List of grants and cumulative amounts given from 1985-2002
[3].
National organizations
These are a few of the many donations that have been granted by the Foundation.
''Over $10 million''
★
Alliance Defense Fund
★
American Enterprise Institute
★
Heritage Foundation, for support to the Domestic Studies Policy Program and Bradley Resident Fellows Program.Project on Federalism and the states: $853,125
[4]
''Over $5 million''
★
Freedom House, to support
Freedom in the World Survey.
[5]
★
National Affairs, to support publication of
The Public Interest and
The National Interest: $350.000.
[6]
''Over $2 million''
★
Federalist Society, Los Angeles, California, To support general operations: $568,750.
[7]
★
David Horowitz Freedom Center
''Over $1 million''
★
Brookings Institution
★
Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Wilmington, Delaware, to support general operations: $90,000.
[8]
★
Institute for American Values, New York, New York, To support general program activities: $100,000.
[9]
★
Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace
★
Institute for Educational Advancement, Washington, D.C., to support general operations: $180.000.
[10]
★
Institute for Justice
''Over $500,000''
★
Black Alliance for Educational Options, Washington, DC, to support general operations: $200,000.
[11]
★
American Spectator Educational Foundation
''Over $100,000''
★
Foundation for Education Reform and Accountability
★
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education
★
Heartland Institute, Chicago, Illinois, To support School Reform News and a Chicago-specific school choice initiative: $50.000.
[12]
★
Third Way Foundation ''(see
Third way)''
★
Progressive Foundation ''(see
Democratic Leadership Council)''
★
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, To support the Center on Reinventing Public Education’s project “Doing Choice Right”: $170.000.
[13]
★
Berkman Center for Internet & Society at
Harvard Law School and the
Stanford Center for Internet & Society at
Stanford Law School for the Net Dialogue project
[14]
''$100,000''
★
Middle East Media Research Institute
''Less than $100,000''
★
Children First America
★
Council for the Spanish Speaking, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to support the Summer Youth Program $5,000.
[15]
★
Potomac Foundation
''Unknown''
★
Center for Education Reform
★
Child Abuse Prevention Fund
★
Corporation for National and Community Service
★
Thomas B. Fordham Institute
★
Middle East Media Research Institute
★
Cato Institute
★
Citizens for a Sound Economy
★
Institute on Religion and Democracy
★
Committee for Peace and Security in the Gulf
★
Committee for the Free World
★
Alexis de Tocqueville Institution
★
Institute for Humane Studies
★
New Citizenship Project
★
Project for the New American Century
Local charities
''Over $5 million''
★
Wisconsin Policy Research Institute
★
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra
''Over $1 million''
★
Madison Center for Educational Affairs (the result of a 1990 merger between the Institute For Educational Affairs and the Madison Center)
[1]
''Over $500,000''
★
Milwaukee Public Library Foundation
''Over $100,000''
★
Hunger Task Force of Milwaukee
★
Wisconsin Historical Foundation
''Unknown amount''
★
Association of Midwest Museums
★
Epilepsy Association of Southwest Wisconsin
★
Milwaukee Youth Symphony Orchestra
★
Milwaukee Public Museum
Public officials
★
Jeane J. Kirkpatrick
★
Jack Kemp
★
William J. Bennett
Jurists
★
Robert H. Bork
★
Antonin Scalia
Writers
★
Marvin Olasky
★
David Brock
Notes
1. "Buying a Movement." People For the American Way. ''pfaw.org''. [16]
External links
★
The Bradley Foundation -- Official website
★
List of Grants and Annual reports from
1997 to
2003 on the official website.
★
The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation -- An analysis and critique by Phil Wilayto
★
''The Feeding Trough: The Bradley Foundation, "The Bell Curve" and the Real Story Behind W-2, Wisconsin's National Model for Welfare Reform.'' -- Investigative report by Phil Wilayto
★
Response from Michael Joyce, foundation president, to ''The Feeding Trough''