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The Bradley Foundation's former president, [[Michael Joyce]], was instrumental in creating the [[Philanthropy Roundtable]], a network of foundations that support right-wing advocacy organizations.
The Bradley Foundation's former president, [[Michael Joyce]], was instrumental in creating the [[Philanthropy Roundtable]], a network of foundations that support right-wing advocacy organizations.


In the early [[1990s]] the foundation helped support the [[American Spectator]] magazine, which at the time was researching damaging material on President [[Bill Clinton]]. Before that, it had paid to have [[David Brock]]'s attack on [[Anita Hill]] published.
In the early [[1990s]] the foundation helped support ''[[The American Spectator]]'' magazine, which at the time was researching damaging material on President [[Bill Clinton]]. Before that, it had paid to have [[David Brock]]'s attack on [[Anita Hill]] published.


The Bradley Foundation has provided important support for think tanks and groups that advocated an attack on [[Iraq]] as a response to the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]], such as the [[Project for a New American Century]] and the [[John M. Olin Center for Strategic Studies]]. In early [[2003]], Joyce bragged to a local paper that President [[George W. Bush]] and members of his administration were influenced by the policy discussions of those groups. Joyce commented that the attack only hastened Bush's inevitable move towards neoconservatism. [http://www.jsonline.com/news/gen/apr03/131523.asp]
The Bradley Foundation has provided important support for think tanks and groups that advocated an attack on [[Iraq]] as a response to the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]], such as the [[Project for a New American Century]] and the [[John M. Olin Center for Strategic Studies]]. In early [[2003]], Joyce bragged to a local paper that President [[George W. Bush]] and members of his administration were influenced by the policy discussions of those groups. Joyce commented that the attack only hastened Bush's inevitable move towards neoconservatism. [http://www.jsonline.com/news/gen/apr03/131523.asp]
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*[http://my.execpc.com/~ajrc/ft.html ''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
*[http://my.execpc.com/~ajrc/ft.html ''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
*[http://www.educationforthepeople.org/Background%2097statement.htm Response from Michael Joyce, foundation president, to ''The Feeding Trough'']
*[http://www.educationforthepeople.org/Background%2097statement.htm Response from Michael Joyce, foundation president, to ''The Feeding Trough'']
[[Category:Foundation]]
[[Category:Foundations]]

Revision as of 19:13, 31 December 2004

The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is a large and influential right-wing foundation with about half a billion US dollars in assets. According to the Bradley Foundation 1998 Annual Report, it was giving away more than $30 million per year. The Foundation has financed efforts to support welfare reform, to promote school vouchers, to deregulate business, and to privatize government services.

The Bradley Foundation's former president, Michael Joyce, was instrumental in creating the Philanthropy Roundtable, a network of foundations that support right-wing advocacy organizations.

In the early 1990s the foundation helped support The American Spectator magazine, which at the time was researching damaging material on President Bill Clinton. Before that, it had paid to have David Brock's attack on Anita Hill published.

The Bradley Foundation has provided important support for think tanks and groups that advocated an attack on Iraq as a response to the September 11, 2001 attacks, such as the Project for a New American Century and the John M. Olin Center for Strategic Studies. In early 2003, Joyce bragged to a local paper that President George W. Bush and members of his administration were influenced by the policy discussions of those groups. Joyce commented that the attack only hastened Bush's inevitable move towards neoconservatism. [1]

Criticism

Phil Wilayto, a writer for the communist Workers World Party, and Media Transparency, a left wing website 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 "investigative report" on the Bradley Foundation, The Feeding Trough, on behalf of the "A Job is a Right Campaign" in Milwaukee. The report attacks the Bradley Foundation for allegedly commissioning the studies that supported the Welfare Reform legislation in Wisconsin. Wiyalto has stated that Wisconsin welfare reform is a draconian program that has increased the misery of the poor by supplying business with forced labor at wages inadequate to maintain a reasonable standard of living for the purpose of bringing massive profits to private business and non-profit agencies.

People for the American Way alleges that the Bradley Foundations underreports its giving to right-wing organizations. [2]

Past and present grantees

List of grants and cumulative amounts given from 1985-2002 [3].

National organizations

Over $10 million

Over $5 million

Over $2 million

Over $1 million

Over $500,000

Over $100,000

Less than $100,000

Unknown

Local charities

Over $5 million

Over $1 million

Over $500,000

Over $100,000

Unknown amount

Public officials

Jurists

Writers

External links