Heritage Expert

Matthew Spalding, Ph.D.

  • Director, B. Kenneth Simon Center for American Studies

Matthew Spalding connects the principles of America's founding with today's thorniest issues as Director of the B. Kenneth Simon Center for American Studies at The Heritage Foundation.

Spalding, a constitutional scholar and authority on American political thought and religious liberty, also serves as project leader of Heritage's First Principles initiative.

The Center for American Studies sponsors lectures, organizes seminars, crafts publications and supports the work of scholars. Its mission is to teach policymakers and political leaders about the principles of our political tradition and to explain the continued relevance and application of those principles in 21st-century America.

In his latest book, We Still Hold These Truths: Rediscovering Our Principles, Reclaiming Our Future (ISI Books, Nov. 2, 2009), Spalding details America's core principles, shows how they have come under assault by modern progressive-liberalism and lays out a strategy to recover them.

First Principles, one of 10 transformational initiatives in Heritage's Leadership for America campaign, seeks to provide a much-needed education for policymakers, the news media and ordinary citizens on the ideas of liberty and constitutional self-government. The overall objective is to reorient the nation's politics and public policy to the enduring principles of the American founding.

Spalding is executive editor of The Heritage Guide to the Constitution, a line-by-line analysis of each clause of the U.S. Constitution. His previous books as author or editor include A Sacred Union of Citizens: Washington's Farewell Address and the American Character; Patriot Sage: George Washington and the American Political Tradition; and The Founders' Almanac: A Practical Guide to the Notable Events, Greatest Leaders & Most Eloquent Words of the American Founding.

Before joining Heritage in 1994, Spalding was a senior policy analyst at the Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy, a think tank in Southern California where he currently is a fellow.

Spalding is a graduate of Claremont McKenna College. He earned a doctorate in government from Claremont Graduate School, concentrating his studies on political philosophy and early American political thought.

He has taught American government at George Mason University, the Catholic University of America and Claremont McKenna College. He is an adjunct fellow of the Kirby Center for Constitutional Studies and Citizenship at Hillsdale College.

Spalding's work on The Heritage Guide to the Constitution, which brought together the contributions of 109 legal authorities, earned him Heritage's prestigious W. Glenn and Rita Ricardo Campbell Award in 2006. The award is given to the Heritage employee who makes "an outstanding contribution to the analysis and promotion of a free society."

Spalding and his wife, Elizabeth, have two children. They live in Arlington, Va.

All Publications by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D.
  • Commentary posted November 30, 2009 by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. Rejecting Principles in the Name of Progress

    The health reform debate has sparked numerous questions about the cost and scope of government involvement in health care. But few members of Congress have bothered to ask what the Constitution has to say on the topic -- even though they are sworn to uphold the principles articulated in… Read more

  • Commentary posted November 25, 2009 by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. Revolutionary Truths That Work

    When upstart settlers of the New World proclaimed their independence in 1776, they represented but 13 small and fractious colonies carved from a vast wilderness and surrounded by hostile powers. Two centuries later, the United States of America is the wealthiest, most powerful nation… Read more

  • Commentary posted November 3, 2009 by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. The Rediscovery of America: Here's the Best Ground from Which to Repulse the Whole Progressive Project

    EDITOR'S NOTE: In his new book, We Still Hold These Truths: Rediscovering Our Principles, Reclaiming Our Future (ISI Books), Matthew Spalding defines America's foundational principles, shows how they have come under assault by modern progressive-liberalism and lays out a strategy to recover them in American society. In… Read more

  • Testimony posted October 8, 2009 by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. Examining the History and Legality of Executive Branch Czars

    Testimony before the United State Senate Committee on the Judiciary October 6, 2009 Let me begin by commending the Senate Judiciary Committee, and especially Senator Feingold, for calling this hearing and giving serious consideration to this issue. Who would have thought that over 200 years after the Declaration… Read more

  • Testimony posted August 28, 2009 by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. Constitutional Amendment Concerning Senate Vacancies

    Testimony before the Subcommittee on the Constitution Senate Judiciary Committee and the Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties House Judiciary Committee March 11, 2009 Thank you for inviting me to testify to you concerning… Read more

  • Commentary posted February 16, 2009 by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. It's Washington's Birthday, Not Presidents' Day

    February 22 is the birthday of George Washington -- the man who, more than any other, made possible our republican form of government. The third Monday in February has come to be known, wrongly, as President's Day. America's political leaders should take this occasion to remember Washington's deeds, recollect his advice, and again call the… Read more

  • Commentary posted December 2, 2008 by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. Liberalized center is 'Capitol' crime

    As an expert in the U.S. Constitution and America's founding, I thought I had lost the ability to be shocked by politically correct distortions of our history. Then I visited the new Capitol Visitor Center. The just-completed Visitor Center, which opens Dec. 2, is a 580,000-square-foot cavern dug at… Read more

  • WebMemo posted May 20, 2008 by Jennifer Marshall California Court's Judicial Activism Threatens the Institution of Marriage

    On May 15, 2008, the California Supreme Court overturned California voters' 61 percent majority, expressed in 2000's Proposition 22, in favor of affirming marriage as the union of one man and one woman. The California court's decision is the latest in a series of judicial and legislative efforts… Read more

  • WebMemo posted December 5, 2007 by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. The Meaning of Religious Liberty

    It is often thought that religious liberty means a strict separation of church and state, but that view is out of tune with the proper understanding of the role religion and morality play in the civic and public life of a self-governing people. A more compelling model is… Read more

  • WebMemo posted September 14, 2007 by Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. The Formation of the Constitution

    The creation of the United States Constitution-John Adams described the Constitutional Convention as "the greatest single effort of national deliberation that the world has ever seen"-was a seminal event in the history of human liberty. The story of that creation in the summer of 1787 is itself a significant… Read more