New data released by Redfield & Wilton Strategies finds that the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 policy proposals are generally popular among the American public. According to the survey, most of the major ideas published in the independent presidential transition project’s policy guide hold over 50 percent support among voters.
According to the survey, 53 percent of Americans agree with the Project 2025 proposition that the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) needs to be reformed and reorganized. Even overtly Republican positions like abolishing the Department of Education—which was a popular mantra during Ronald Reagan’s presidency—hold nearly even support among Americans.
AMERICANS WANT REFORM.
Many see the DHS, which oversees everything from the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to the United States Secret Service (USSS), as too large and too ill-defined to function properly. Under the Project 2025 plan, the DHS would be dismantled into its component agencies, with some subagencies consolidated or closed down.
In keeping with continued polling trends showing a strong backlash against the Biden–Harris government’s failed immigration policies, 51 percent of respondents agreed with the Project 2025 calls for increasing funding for a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. Recent polling has found strong majorities of Americans support both the border wall and the mass deportation of illegal immigrants.
Even abolishing the Department of Education—long viewed as one of the more radical proposals that gained popularity during the Reagan era—was only opposed by 51 percent of survey respondents. Under the Project 2025 plan, states—and not the federal government—would set curriculum standards and, for the most part, oversee U.S. education policy.
MEDIA AND DEM LIES.
The National Pulse has previously reported how Democrats and their corporate media allies have spread falsehoods regarding the Heritage Foundation‘s independent presidential transition project. For instance, Project 2025’s former director, Paul Dans, recently noted that Democratic Party leaders and their media allies have falsely claimed that the group proposes cutting social security. According to Dans, Project 2025’s policy book doesn’t contain a single social security chapter.