Thursday, 17 Oct 2024

Project 2025 ex-director denounces Heritage president’s ‘violent rhetoric’

Project 2025 ex-director denounces Heritage president’s ‘violent rhetoric’


Project 2025 ex-director denounces Heritage president’s ‘violent rhetoric’

The former director of Project 2025, a conservative plan to overhaul the US government, has blamed "violent rhetoric" from his former boss Kevin Roberts, the president of the Heritage Foundation thinktank, for the blueprint's downgrading as Donald Trump has sought to publicly distance himself from it.

Paul Dans, who resigned as head of the project in July after it threatened to become an electoral liability for Trump, said it was damaged after Roberts made inflammatory comments in a podcast that were widely interpreted as a veiled threat against leftwingers if they resisted an envisioned conservative takeover.

In an interview with the Washington Post, Dans also called on Trump's running mate, JD Vance, to withdraw a foreword he wrote for Roberts's forthcoming book, which has been criticised for perceived violent undercurrents, partly due to its appeal to rightwingers to "load the muskets".

"If we're going to ask the left to tone it down, we have to do our part as well," Dans told the newspaper. "There's no place for this sort of violent rhetoric and bellicose taunting, especially in light of the fact that President Trump has now been subject to not one but two assassination attempts."

Roberts made headlines in July when he told Dave Brat, a former Republican congressman who was presenting Steve Bannon's podcast: "We are in the process of the second American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the left allows it to be."

The comments intensified scrutiny on Project 2025, a 922-page policy document detailing plans for - among other things - the mass firing of thousands of civil servants and a drastic curtailment of reproductive rights. The project had been run, in collaboration with other thinktanks, under the Heritage Foundation's auspices and the ultimate authority of Roberts.

Trump subsequently sought to disown the project - in public at least - as the Democrats seized on Roberts's remarks to highlight its most radical provisions and depict it as a roadmap for a second Trump presidency. The Republican nominee falsely claimed that he did not know its architects, even though many of them - including Dans - had served under him when he was US president.

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