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Fight for
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2020 Annual Report
Home  /  Fighting for the Next Generation

Fighting for the Next Generation

Equipping America’s Rising Leaders


Your Impact

The Future of the Movement


  • 400+ fellows from across the country and around the world took part in Heritage’s new Academy online fellowship program in 2020, including college students, graduates students, and high school students.
  • Fellows weren’t just hard-core conservatives—they included moderates and even some left-leaning college and graduate students.
  • 95 percent of Academy fellows told us they’d consider pursuing a career in the conservative movement.
  • 99 percent of fellows told us they were committed to “building an America where freedom, opportunity, prosperity, and civil society flourish.”

My internship was foundational for me in sorting out my career path post-graduation. I didn’t know where I would end up in the conservative movement, but I knew I wanted to be engaged in the fight.

—Peter Redpath
The Federalist Society
Darius Franklin (top) and Abigail Klare (bottom) were among the Academy fellows who participated in the 2020 President’s Club Meeting.
2020 Impact

Education


  • As Heritage urged, Oklahoma used a portion of funding allocated through the CARES Act to provide ESA-style accounts to families. Heritage supported a similar effort in South Carolina that resulted in the state moving to make its CARES funds portable.
  • In August, more than 1,700 people registered for Heritage’s virtual summit Protecting Children in Education to strategize against explicit K-12 sexual education materials in America’s schools.
  • The White House released an executive order permitting Community Service Block Grant funds to be used for ESA-style options by families that don’t have access to in-person learning.
  • Heritage staff and alumni contributed to the president’s 1776 Commission and pivotal 1776 Commission Report, one of President Trump’s final actions in office.
  • In February, the Wisconsin General Assembly took a cue from Heritage and passed a campus free speech bill that imposes mandatory disciplinary sanctions against students who violate free speech guidelines.

Welfare


  • In March 2020, the Trump administration issued a proposed regulation calling for a new and more accurate measure of poverty, consistent with Heritage’s long-standing recommendations.
  • Congress and the Trump administration adopted Heritage’s policy prescription that welfare relief during the COVID-19 pandemic be targeted and temporary.

The architects of America’s future are among us today. They’re the rising leaders who took part in The Heritage Foundation’s Young Leaders Program in record numbers in 2020. Thanks to the ardent support of our members, our premier training and education program for young people grew larger and more effective, even while facing a worldwide pandemic.

From Interns to The Academy

In the spring of 2020, as internships and fellowship programs across the country shut down, we found a way to continue to build and educate the conservative movement.

Although we had to send our spring interns home early and cancel our summer intern program, we launched a new program that kept everyone engaged with Heritage: The Academy. The online Academy allowed us to continue hosting interns throughout 2020 and inspire and educate other future leaders.

The Academy is an online learning program open to people of all ages who are interested in intellectual formation and conservative principles. Whereas we can accept only 60 or so interns in our traditional intern program, The Academy allowed us to reach some 400 people, the vast majority of whom were college students, graduate students, high schoolers, Heritage interns, and young professionals.

Because the online Academy did not require travel to Washington, D.C., or as much of a time commitment, it gave young people who were on the fence about conservatism a chance to test drive our ideas.

This meant that our Academy fellows were more diverse ideologically: 44 identified as moderate, 29 as libertarian, 14 as liberals, and—amazingly—three socialists even expressed interest in the program.

Our results are impressive. Many of our Academy fellows changed their positions after involvement in the program’s lectures and discussion groups, delving into policy, history, economics, and political thought.

In exit surveys, 95 percent of fellows said that they would consider pursuing a career in the conservative movement.

Moreover, 99 percent said they were committed to “building an America where freedom, opportunity, prosperity, and civil society flourish.”

Hands-on Experience

Interns and Academy fellows worked directly with our experts to develop everything from speeches to Daily Signal articles. But there’s no better example of hands-on learning than the Academy’s Capstone Projects. Fellows researched and developed actionable, innovative solutions to current policy challenges of their choosing.

Our best Capstone Projects of 2020 included:

  • Recommendations for improving rapid DNA testing on the U.S. southern border, aimed at preventing sex trafficking and human smuggling.
  • Solutions to combat public schools’ indoctrination of children with leftist ideals on gender identity, sexuality, and history—and an alternative curriculum based on human dignity, virtue, and biological truth.
  • Recommendations for American universities to combat China’s use of Chinese students studying in the U.S. to illicitly gather U.S. intellectual property.
  • A plan for a new think tank that monitors the state of religious liberty in the U.S. and trains religious leaders and community leaders to defend their rights.
Darius Franklin (left) and Abigail Klare (right) were among the Academy fellows who participated in the 2020 President’s Club Meeting.
Broadening the Movement

In 2020, our work to expand the conservative movement and reach new audiences resulted in a strong uptick in the number of participants from minority-serving institutions: Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Asian American- and Pacific Islander-serving institutions, and Hispanic-serving institutions.

We made connections with 85 individuals at 65 different minority-serving institutions, where we promoted Heritage through career fairs, campus talks, mailings, and campus liaisons. Seventy-eight of those connections resulted in applications to The Academy.

We made sure The Heritage Foundation was known on every campus. In 2020, we reached 46,000 students via:

  • 13 career fairs
  • 19 webinars
  • 6 conferences
  • 15 student briefings
  • 5 alumni “reunions”

In 2020, we placed a special emphasis on reaching college- and high school-aged students with the truth about America’s founding. Heritage historians and scholars conducted more than 100 lectures and policy briefings at premier colleges and universities.

We’re also making impressive inroads among professors and academics. In 2020, our Scholars Working Group of 25 conservative professors and academics supported one another in defense of academic freedom on campus. We forged new relationships with intellectual elites at Harvard University, the University of Notre Dame, the University of Pennsylvania, and Columbia University.

Meet Our Alumni

What do D.C. Circuit Court Judge Neomi Rao, the Federalist Society’s Peter Redpath, and radio host Vince Coglianese have in common?

They’re all former Heritage interns. More and more, the Young Leaders Program serves as a starting line for influential conservatives.

In 2020, our alumni network grew to more than 5,000. You can find 1,147 of these alumni, and see what they’re doing now, on The Heritage Foundation Official Intern Alumni Network on LinkedIn.com.

My internship was foundational for me in sorting out my career path post-graduation. I didn’t know where I would end up in the conservative movement, but I knew I wanted to be engaged in the fight.

—Peter Redpath
The Federalist Society

Here’s an update on some of our alumni.

Vince Coglianese, host of WMAL’s popular radio show “Mornings on the Mall” and Daily Caller editorial director, received Heritage’s Robin and Jocelyn Martin Distinguished Intern Alumni Award in 2020. The award recognizes former Heritage interns who have gone on to successful careers in government, academia, public policy, or the private sector.

Marjorie Dannenfelser, an intern in 1986 who is now the president of the pro-life Susan B. Anthony List, celebrated the new constitutionalist majority on the Supreme Court.

Peter Redpath, who interned in 1998, now leads the Federalist Society’s student division and is educating young people on the Electoral College, constitutional originalism, and other important topics.

Neomi Rao, an intern in 1997, continues to uphold the rule of law and the Constitution as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

Julian Hoyos and Ivonne Mieles, from Heritage’s two 2020 Academy classes, co-founded a conservative policy think tank that promotes liberty-minded reforms in Colombia and Ecuador.

Eduardo Dibos, a 2020 Academy alumnus, now leads a chapter of the Leadership Institute in Peru, equipping young conservatives in his country to win elections and defeat the rising popularity of socialism.

Your Impact

The Future of the Movement


  • 400+ fellows from across the country and around the world took part in Heritage’s new Academy online fellowship program in 2020, including college students, graduates students, and high school students.
  • Fellows weren’t just hard-core conservatives—they included moderates and even some left-leaning college and graduate students.
  • 95 percent of Academy fellows told us they’d consider pursuing a career in the conservative movement.
  • 99 percent of fellows told us they were committed to “building an America where freedom, opportunity, prosperity, and civil society flourish.”
2020 Impact

Education


  • As Heritage urged, Oklahoma used a portion of funding allocated through the CARES Act to provide ESA-style accounts to families. Heritage supported a similar effort in South Carolina that resulted in the state moving to make its CARES funds portable.
  • In August, more than 1,700 people registered for Heritage’s virtual summit Protecting Children in Education to strategize against explicit K-12 sexual education materials in America’s schools.
  • The White House released an executive order permitting Community Service Block Grant funds to be used for ESA-style options by families that don’t have access to in-person learning.
  • Heritage staff and alumni contributed to the president’s 1776 Commission and pivotal 1776 Commission Report, one of President Trump’s final actions in office.
  • In February, the Wisconsin General Assembly took a cue from Heritage and passed a campus free speech bill that imposes mandatory disciplinary sanctions against students who violate free speech guidelines.

Welfare


  • In March 2020, the Trump administration issued a proposed regulation calling for a new and more accurate measure of poverty, consistent with Heritage’s long-standing recommendations.
  • Congress and the Trump administration adopted Heritage’s policy prescription that welfare relief during the COVID-19 pandemic be targeted and temporary.
Heritage Member Spotlight

Leaving a Legacy of Freedom


Heritage Legacy Society members Barney Loret de Mola and Yvonne Conde pose in front of the Liberty Bell on a visit to Independence Hall in Philadelphia.

Husband and wife Bernabe Loret de Mola and Yvonne Conde may have followed different paths to America, but their hearts arrived in the same place: filled with a profound love for America and a deep concern over where it may be heading.

Bernabe, or “Barney” as he is known to friends, was born in Cuba but attended boarding school in the United States from a young age. When he was 15, he and his mother left Cuba for good and immigrated to New York City. While a student at City College of New York, he admits being exposed to the socialist sentiments pervasive on so many college campuses during the 1950s. Later, as Barney made his own way through medical school, he started to understand how taking self-sufficiency away from people is problematic to a free society. Barney was eventually drafted into the Navy, where he served as a doctor during the Vietnam War, an experience that further reinforced a shift toward a more conservative worldview.

Yvonne, also born in Cuba, took a more perilous route to the United States as a minor evacuated through Operation Pedro Pan. Like many families who were initially supportive of Castro’s fight against the previous regime’s corruption, her family soon realized this was a pretense for a hard-line communist regime. Everyone’s movements were monitored. Personal property was seized. Severe food shortages became the norm. Seemingly overnight, they found themselves living in a dystopian communist nightmare.

When Barney and Yvonne are asked what most concerns them both today, their answer is immediate and passionately unified: the loss of freedom of expression.

“We are seeing our freedom of expression eroded, and this is truly scary to me,” says Yvonne. “Freedom is why I came to this country! And when this freedom is gone, what will we lose next?”

It was Yvonne and Barney’s love for America—and concern for its future—that led them to include a provision for Heritage in their estate plans and become members of our Heritage Legacy Society.

“I want Heritage’s light and ideas to keep shining for future generations,” says Yvonne. “We believe America’s ideals must continue. When we’re no longer on this Earth, it’s important for us to know what we’ve left will be put to good use.”

Named Interns


Caesar Arredondo Interns

Joseph Buzzetti

University of Miami (Coral Gables)

Luis Cornelio

City College of New York

Nickolas Gonzalez

Florida International University

Brady Marzen

Georgetown University

Sabrina Rosell

Florida International University

Jonathan Tao

Duke University

Rick and Pattie Barrett Intern

Joseph McAndrew

The George Washington University

H.N. and Frances C. Berger Foundation Interns

Reed Bonee

Vanderbilt University

Alexis Miller

Christendom College

Sloane Perkins

Clemson University

Kevin Ramos

Sarah Williams

Pensacola Christian College

Bernard Zitzewitz

Villanova University

John and Barbara Bruning Intern

Chamberlain Harris

University of Albany

Elizabeth Mallinckrodt Bryden Intern

Vanessa Barnes

University of Utah

David V. Burgett Interns

Tanner Aliff

George Fox University

Audrey Pederson

Carnegie Mellon University

Marionlou P. and David J. Burke Intern

Allison Williams

Pepperdine University

Mary H. Campbell Foundation Intern

Marcos Mullin

University of Texas, San Antonio

Richard Earl Carter Meese Center Intern

Rose Laoutaris

American University

Carter and Moyers Intern

Julia Donnelly

The Catholic University of America

Clough Family Intern

Kevin Hills

Furman University

John R. and Margrite Davis Foundation Intern

Jonathan Tao

Duke University

Gene D’Agostino Meese Center Intern

Krishna Hegde

Harvard Law School

Gary L. Dawson Interns

Matthew Cookson

Texas Christian University

Rachel Summa

Berry College

Rebecca Eddy de Broekert Intern

Jackson Tunks

Queens University

Franklet Intern

Anna Tyger

Emporia State University

Richard and Barbara Gaby Interns

Allison Hayman

University of Georgia

Charlotte Townsend

College of Charleston

Berniece and William Grewcock Interns

Virginia Aabram

Hillsdale College

Thomas Condon

Wake Forest University

Lauryn Melanson

Hillsdale College

Allison Schuster

Hillsdale College

Shaddi Spencer

College of Charleston

Jan Hair Interns

Ashley Cheatham

Weatherford College

Sam Trippie

Niagara University

Linda Boyce Haller Intern

Grant Dunnavan

Wheaton College

Marjorie W. Herrick Intern

Noah Collier

Wake Forest University

Huston Foundation Intern

Garret Hoff

The George Washington University

David A. King Intern

Leo Holtz

Saint Louis University

Kevin Kline Intern

Jonathan Skee

Grove City College

Kevin Kookogey Meese Center Intern

Chandler Hubbard

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Kuchta Family Intern

Kyle Jacobson

Olivet Nazarene University

David and Rebecca Laschinger Intern

Alex Richey

Liberty University

Robert Mair Meese Center Interns

Courtney Baer

Wheaton College

Julia Canady

University of Florida

Mayer Intern

Chloe Folmar

College of William & Mary

Robert S. and Janet L. Miller Foundation Interns

Collin Bastian

Wheaton College

Laura Conaty

West Chester University

Janae Diaz

Azusa Pacific University

Catronia Fee

The Catholic University of America

Michaela Hebbeler

The Catholic University of America

Adrian Hyman-Martin

University of Albany

Lisa Krieghauser

Thomas Edison State University

Natalie Morgan

Isabella Wagner

The Catholic University of America

Guido and Sue Pichini Interns

Grant Mantooth

University of Virginia

Taylor Wilson

Penn State

Pilgrim Foundation Interns

Stephanie Neville

George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School

Ian Smith

Doris and Richard Pistole Intern

Kaitlyn Anderson

University of Texas

Ray Foundation Interns

Mairead Kennon

Ave Maria University

Noah Levin

The George Washington University

Jacob Orse

Brigham Young University—Idaho

Haskell Robinson Interns

Ilana Blumsack

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Colton Moor

Virginia Wesleyan College

William Sallomi

Stanford University

Lisenne Rockefeller Intern

Julia Westwick

Trinity University

Jordan Saunders Intern

Theresa Olohan

Notre Dame University

Greg Sheehan Meese Center Interns

Courtney Baer

Wheaton College

Naila Meese

University of Georgia

Shining City on a Hill Interns

Joshua Boyle

University of Tulsa

Rachael McBride

Texas A&M University

Spencer Moffat

Rice University

Laura VanderPloeg

Olivet Nazarene University

Nathalie Voit

University of Florida

Elexa Willison

University of Michigan

Harry E. Sims Congressional Programs Interns

Mary Kettinger

Franciscan University of Steubenville

Louis Larsen

Col. Charles B. and Sally G. Stevenson Intern

Zachary Federico

Liberty University

Sidney A. Swensrud Foundation Interns

Tony Apoloto

The Catholic University of America

Daniella Smith

Wheaton College

George W. Tippins Intern

Gurtej Narang

Georgia State University

Tom Tracy Intern

Zachary Thapar

University of Notre Dame

Triad Foundation Intern

Mary Cortese

Franciscan University of Steubenville

Ronald and Dorothy Weinel Intern

Katelyn Alexander

Truman State University

James A. West Intern for Defense in the Davis Institute

Joseph Scott IV

Daniel Morgan Graduate School of National Security

Samuel Westerman Foundation Interns

Martha Phillips

Baylor University

Bernard Zitzewitz

Villanova University

Winzenried Intern

Catherine Kildea

The Catholic University of America

William M. Young Meese Center Intern

Emma Posey

Lee University