How much of Project 2025 has been implemented? Enough to break us beyond repair. | Opinion
I read the 920-page Project 2025. Here's what really surprised me, after hours swimming in this filthy pool: I kind of get it.
Project 2025 is a Magic 8 Ball of doom, and having this document on my desktop is a potent and terrifying lure.
All of those things you've felt vaguely queasy about for the past two months – laying off broad swathes of the workforces at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Social Security Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency;
threats to privatize the Transportation Security Administration and
dismantling the Department of Education – they're all in there, and
more.
At about 920 pages, Project 2025
is hard to read cover to cover, but search for the function of
government most important to your life and you'll find all the usual
suspects – Planned Parenthood, LGBTQ+ rights, Medicaid and Medicare,
Social Security, the Affordable Care Act – lined up for a nip and a
tuck, if not excision outright.
![A sign reading "Exposing Project 2025" is seen during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol in September 2024 in Washington, D.C.]()
I
could tell you the five weirdest parts of Project 2025, the seven
things most likely to happen next or the three items I'm most concerned
about ‒ like privatizing Social Security and deregulating baby formula,
an obsession with the false notion that abortions frequently result in
live babies, or the belief that power-mad Marxist liberals affiliated
with the Chinese Communist Party have infiltrated American institutions,
particularly universities.
But no tidy
encapsulation conveys the scope and breadth of this agenda, portions of
which are being enacted every day by a president with a penchant for
destruction and an unelected efficiency edgelord.
Need a break?
Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.Except maybe this.
The heart of Project 2025 is the entry on wild horses and burros
I found the heart of Project 2025 in, I'm not making this up, the entry on the National Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board, one government agency that had previously flown under my radar (page 528, if you'd like to follow along):
"In
1971, Congress ordered the (Bureau of Land Management) to manage wild
horses and burros to ensure their iconic presence never disappeared from
the western landscape. ... There are 95,000 wild horses and burros
roaming nearly 32 million acres in the West ‒ triple what scientists and
land management experts say the range can support. These animals face
starvation and death ... at a cost to the American taxpayer of nearly
$50 million annually to care for them in off-range corrals.
![Wild horses are contained in large corrals at the National Wild Horse and Burro Center in the Palomino Valley near Reno on Feb. 19, 2025.]()
"This
is not a new issue ‒ it is not just a western issue ‒ it is an American
issue. What is happening to these once-proud beasts of burden is
neither compassionate nor humane, and what these animals are doing to
federal lands and fragile ecosystems is unacceptable."
The
report goes on to list remedies suggested by the board, such as
expanded adoption and sales, additional fertility control and off-range
pasturing. None of that will be enough, the authors conclude: "Congress
must enact laws permitting the BLM to dispose humanely of these
animals."
I can't help but see wild horses as a metaphor for what Project 2025's authors want to do to America.
Opinion:
Trump is intentionally murdering the stock market. Imagine if Biden did that.US government is bloated and inefficient – according to Project 2025
In
these pages, the U.S. government is bloated, rambling and inefficient, a
patchwork of unnecessary bureaucracy and programs dominated by Marxist
liberals who hate America.
The government,
according to Project 2025, has been perverted by "diversicrats" to
spread a trifecta of woke lies at home and abroad (namely: It's OK to be
LGBTQ+, women should control our own bodies and climate change is real –
that's why the U.S. Agency for International Development had to go).
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The range can no longer support this once-proud nation, and something has to be done. Axl Rose put it a little more plainly: "I used to love her, but I had to kill her."
Donald Trump is better at this than we are
Make
no mistake about what is happening: Our federal government is being put
out of its misery. While courts have halted or reversed some of Trump's
blitz of layoffs and executive orders, I'm afraid the damage has been done.
How
can you fill gaps in the collection of scientific data, restart
scientific research dependent on continuity or reinstate a department
once its employees have learned exactly how precarious their livelihoods
are?
![President Donald Trump walks to deliver remarks on tariffs in the Rose Garden at the White House on April 2, 2025.]()
On the campaign trail, Trump insisted again and again that he had no connection to Project 2025, hadn't even heard of it, didn't know the people involved.
And yet.
That
is this president's modus operandi – say a thing, walk it back, say it
again, walk it back, over and over until it's nearly impossible for
people like me to write a simple declaratory statement without so many
qualifiers that you, the reader, are either left wondering why I'm
reporting such a suspect thing at all, or frustrated that I'm bothering
to report the president's hedging when any idiot can tell he was never
actually joking.
The
sad truth is that Donald Trump is better at this dance than we are at
parsing his words for meaning, or even taking him at his word, even when
the agenda is spelled out in a 920-page report.
Even when we can see our government breaking in real time.
Headed for the slaughterhouse
Here's
what really surprised me, after hours swimming in this filthy pool: I
kind of get it. Not the parts about deregulating baby formula and the
malevolent Marxism of liberal elites, but the indefensible largeness of
the federal government and the inefficiencies that inevitably result
from such a sprawling mission.
Even so, it's equally indefensible to rip away the supports that our government offers.
![Wild horses are contained in large corrals at the National Wild Horse and Burro Center in the Palomino Valley near Reno on Feb. 19, 2025.]()
America
has always been governed by idealists who believed the judicious
application of government could solve a host of civic and social ills:
Taxation without representation; inequity in wealth and education;
pollution in our air and water; not enough kids graduating from college
to support an advanced economy; disenfranchisement because of race or
gender; needless strife and suffering overseas, coupled with the spread
of our soft influence; legislation to extend health care to uninsured
Americans; our industrial, agricultural, logistical and personal needs
for accurate weather reports and climate data.
And
mostly, they've been right. Americans rely on Social Security, and
federal funding for our schools, and environmental data collected
without a corporate agenda.
At least, we used to.
Opinion:
It's getting harder to tell if Trump was ever on our sideThe report's authors quote James Madison's Federalist No. 45,
published in 1788, lauding the virtues of small federal government:
“The powers reserved to the several States will extend to all the
objects, which, in the ordinary course of affairs, concern the lives,
liberties and properties of the people; and the internal order,
improvement and prosperity of the State.”
Project
2025's authors believe they've diagnosed the problem ‒ "Modern
progressive politics has simply given the national government more to do
than the complex separation-of-powers Constitution allows. ... The only
real solution is for the national government to do less: to
decentralize and privatize as much as possible."
But I'd point Project 2025's authors to Thomas Jefferson,
writing 28 years later ‒ "Some men look at Constitutions with
sanctimonious reverence, & deem them, like the ark of the covenant,
too sacred to be touched. They ascribe to the men of the preceding age a
wisdom more than human, and suppose what they did to be beyond
amendment. I knew that age well: I belonged to it, and labored with it.
It deserved well of its country. It was very like the present, but
without the experience of the present. ... Laws and institutions must go
hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. … We might as well
require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy, as
civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous
ancestors."
That's where we're headed –
squeezing our massive country back into a child's coat, designed for 13
sparsely populated colonies almost 250 years ago.
Wild horses are a problem
in the western states, but most of them have been rounded up and live
off-range. The biggest problem, news outlets report, is that a program
to incentivize the purchase of wild horses at auction may instead funnel
the animals into the slaughterhouse.
I imagine the authors of Project 2025 wouldn't object.
Nancy Kaffer is the editorial page editor of the Detroit Free Press, where this column originally appeared. Contact:nkaffer@freepress.com