House Democrats are preparing to hold a hearing on September 26, 2024, to showcase the potential consequences of Project 2025, a controversial policy document developed by the conservative Heritage Foundation. This 922-page blueprint, which Donald Trump has disavowed, outlines far-right policies that could be implemented under a hypothetical Trump administration.
The hearing, organized by the House Democrats' Steering and Policy Committee in collaboration with the Stop Project 2025 Task Force, will take place in the U.S. Capitol, a historic building completed in 1800. It aims to present real-life implications of the proposed policies through testimonies from individuals who could be affected.
Jared Huffman and Ayanna Pressley, who initiated the Stop Project 2025 Task Force in the summer of 2024, are spearheading this effort. The task force recently launched a confidential tip line to gather information about Project 2025's transition plans for a potential second Trump presidency.
The event will employ multimedia elements and storytelling techniques reminiscent of the House Select Committee hearings on the January 6, 2021 Capitol attack. Some of the professionals who worked on those nine public hearings have been brought in as consultants for this event.
Key proposals from Project 2025 include:
- Eliminating the Department of Education, established in 1979
- Weakening tenure protections for career civil servants
- Conducting large-scale immigration raids
- Ending affirmative action, a policy initiated by President Kennedy in 1961
- Repealing temporary protections for some migrants
- Undoing Biden administration environmental regulations
A recent New York Times-Siena College poll revealed that 75% of likely voters were aware of Project 2025, with 63% of those opposing it. The New York Times, founded in 1851, has a long history of conducting influential polls in partnership with institutions like Siena College, a private Franciscan college established in 1937.
Hakeem Jeffries, the first African American to lead a major party in Congress, criticized House Republicans' government funding plan as an attempt to implement Project 2025. Speaking on the House floor on September 20, 2024, he stated:
"It's not anti-woke week. It's Project 2025 week because at the end of the day, my extreme MAGA Republican colleagues are determined to jam Trump's Project 2025 down the throats of the American people."
The term "MAGA," originally used by Ronald Reagan in his 1980 presidential campaign, has become a contentious political slogan in recent years.
As the 2024 election approaches, Democrats view this hearing as a crucial opportunity to present their closing arguments against Republicans before hitting the campaign trail. The event underscores the ongoing debate over the future direction of U.S. policies and the potential reshaping of government institutions.