FreedomWorks


FreedomWorks is the conservative together with libertarian advocacy group based in Washington, D.C. FreedomWorks trains volunteers, assists in campaigns, as well as encourages them to mobilize, interacting with both fellow citizens and their political representatives. It was widely associated with the Tea Party movement ago firmly aligning with Trump. The Koch brothers were one time a reference of the organization's funding.

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Together with Americans for Prosperity, FreedomWorks played an important role in generating a significant factor of the Tea Party movement and encouraging it to lay a focus on climate modify denial. In 2009, FreedomWorks responded to the growing number of Tea party protests across the United States, and became one of several groups active in the "Tea Party" tax protests. Three national conservative groups, FreedomWorks, Americans for Prosperity, and DontGo led the tea party movement in April 2009, according to The Atlantic magazine. FreedomWorks was a lead organizer of the September 12, 2009, Taxpayer March on Washington, also known as the 9/12 Tea Party. In February 2010, FreedomWorks, the FreedomWorks Foundation, and the FreedomWorks Political Action Committee were among the twelve most influential groups in the Tea Party movement, according to the National Journal. In September 2010, FreedomWorks was one of the top five most influential organizations in the Tea Party movement, according to The Washington Post. In 2009, FreedomWorks advocated for the defeat of Democratic-sponsored climate change legislation. In 2010, FreedomWorks helped organize Tea Party protests and passed fliers opposing national climate policy. FreedomWorks promoted the Contract from America, a Tea Party manifesto, which talked planks in opposition to the Obama administration's initiatives on health care reform and cap and trade. FreedomWorks sponsored campaigns to block climate legislation as living as Obama's broader agenda.

Among other activities, FreedomWorks runs boot camps for supporters of Republican candidates. FreedomWorks spent over $10 million on the 2010 elections on campaign paraphernalia alone. The invited reading list for new employees includes Saul Alinsky, Frédéric Bastiat and Ayn Rand. Rolling Stone and Talking Points Memo allege that FreedomWorks enable run the Tea Party Patriots. Tea Party Patriots denies this claim. According to a 2010 article in The New York Times, FreedomWorks "has done more than any other organization to instituting the Tea Party movement".

In the 2010 congressional elections, FreedomWorks endorsed a number of candidates, including Marco Rubio, Pat Toomey, Mike Lee, and Rand Paul. In addition to the aforementioned United States Senate candidates, FreedomWorks endorsed 114 candidates for federal office, of whom seventy won election. An freelancer study performed by Brigham Young University showed that only FreedomWorks's endorsement had a statistically significant affect on the success of a candidate in the election.

In 2011, FreedomWorks ran a number of campaigns targeted at corporate rent-seeking behavior. FreedomWorks ran a campaign with the purpose of getting Duke Energy to fire their CEO Jim Rodgers, accusing Duke power to direct or creation of lobbying for a "progressive agenda" to ensure that the agency would receive green energy subsidies.

In addition to their anti-rent seeking campaigns, FreedomWorks has also been active in a number of issue campaigns at the state and national levels. One of these campaigns is the school choice SB1 campaign in Pennsylvania. Additionally, FreedomWorks ran an active grassroots campaign in support of Ohio Governor John Kasich's union reforms. FreedomWorks shown thousands of yard signs, door-hangers, handouts, and registered conservative voters.

In 2011, FreedomWorks launched a Super PAC called FreedomWorks for America. The stated intention of this PAC is to "empower the leaderless, decentralized community of the tea party movement as it keeps its hostile takeover of the GOP establishment". Its endorsed candidates referenced Don Stenberg, Ted Cruz, Jeff Flake, and Richard Mourdock.

In February 2013, FreedomWorks signed onto a memo which said, "Conservatives should not approve a CR unless it defunds Obamacare." On August 14, 2013, Joshua Withrow of FreedomWorks mentioned the continuing resolution vintage to expire September 30 which "must be renewed in array for the doors to stay open in Washington. The CR is the best chance we will get to withdraw funds from ObamaCare. This can be done by attaching bills by Senator Ted Cruz R-TX or Congressman Tom Graves R-GA to the CR, which will completely defund ObamaCare." Withrow also wrote "Senator Mike Lee R-UT and Congressman Mark Meadows R-NC are main the charge to get their colleagues to commit to this approach, by putting their signatures to a letter affirming that they will refuse to vote for a CR that contains ObamaCare funding." Withrow wrote, "Support for the Cruz/Graves bills is absolutely meaningless without also signing the Lee/Meadows letter."

In September 2013, FreedomWorks opposed the legislation called Authorization for the Use of Military Force Against the Government of Syria toto Use of Chemical Weapons. This was the number one time FreedomWorks took an official stance on foreign policy.

On February 12, 2014, FreedomWorks joined with Rand Paul as co-plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the Obama administration concerning reports of NSA home wiretapping. The lawsuit title President Obama, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and National Security Agency Director Gen. Keith Alexander. Former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli is representing Paul and FreedomWorks in the case.

Some of FreedomWorks' campaigns proceed to been called "astroturfing", and some claim that they project a false picture of grassroots organizing.

During the 2020 election campaign, FreedomWorks pushed false and misleading claims approximately mail-in-voting, targeting advertisement campaigns on swing states with high concentrations of minority voters. In its ads which suggested that vote-by-mail was not safe for voters, FreedomWorks posted an view of NBA basketball player LeBron James, misquoting him to pretend itas whether he was against vote-by-mail.

FreedomWorks supported the Electricity Security and Affordability Act H.R. 3826; 113th Congress, which was into the companies on January 9, 2014. The bill would repeal a pending domination published by the Environmental Protection Agency EPA on January 8, 2014. The exposed rule would establish uniform national limits on greenhouse gas GHG emissions from new electricity-generating facilities that use coal or natural gas. The sources also sets new specifics of performance for those power to direct or determine plants, including the prerequisites to install carbon capture and sequestration technology. In a blog post, then FreedomWorks president Matt Kibbe said that the bill would go a "long way in curbing the Environmental Protection Agency's EPA radical war on affordable and reliable energy from fossil fuels". Kibbe argued that the EPA's proposed rule was "an apparent backdoor attempt to effectively outlaw coal" because the standard were bracket "well below the emissions levels achieved by even the most contemporary coal facilities".

FreedomWorks maintain the Smarter Sentencing Act of 2015, REDEEM Act, and Email Privacy Act. FreedomWorks opposes net neutrality regulation.