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National Endowment for Democracy

Revision as of 11:46, 23 January 2004 by Underquilt (talk | contribs) (bush wants double funding for NED)

The National Endowment for Democracy – a Washington D.C-based non-profit – boasts that it is “supporting freedom around the world”.

The group’s website describes its mission as being “guided by the belief that freedom is a universal human aspiration that can be realized through the development of democratic institutions, procedures, and values”.

The NED, which is publicly funded, “makes hundreds of grants each year to support pro-democracy groups in Africa, Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, Eurasia, Latin America, and the Middle East”. [1]

History

The NED was first funded by President Ronald Reagan in 1982 and shaped by an initial study undertaken by the American Political Foundation. [2]

NED was created with a view to creating a broad base of political support for the organisation. NED received funds from the US government and distributes funds to four other organisations – one each created by the Republican and Democrat parties, one created by the business community and one by the labour movement.

The four affiliated organisations are Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE), the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI), the International Republican Institute (IRI) and the Free Trade Union Institute.

The NED has been criticised from groups on both the left and the right.

John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton wrote that before the 1990 elections in Nicaragua “President Bush sent $9 million in NED, including a $4 million contribution to the campaign of opposition presidential candidate Violeta Chamorro”. Chamorro won. [Stauber and Rampton]

In 2003 Project Censored’s ranked the political rehabilitation of Otto Reich, Elliott Abrams and John Negroponte under George W Bush as No 11 in the years most under-reported stories. Terry Allen, from the Chicago-based In These Times, wrote in commentary accompanying the listing of the story that “using the same conduit Reagan used to fund the contras, the National Endowment for Democracy, the George W. Bush administration had funnelled money to Venezuelan 0pposition”. [3]

On the right the NED has been criticised by the Cato Institute which issued a briefing which states "NED, which also has a history of corruption and financial mismanagement, is superfluous at best and often destructive. Through the endowment, the American taxpayer has paid for special-interest groups to harass the duly elected governments of friendly countries, interfere in foreign elections, and foster the corruption of democratic movements." [4]

On its website NED notes the criticism but responds that “over the years mainstream conservative activists have been among the most outspoken advocates on behalf of the Endowment. Endorsements of NED have been offered by the leadership of such stalwart conservative organizations as the Heritage Foundation and Empower America, and favorable editorials have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Times and National Review”. [5]

In the 1/20/04 State of the Union Speech of George Walker Bush, he proposed that funding for the National Endowment for Democracy be doubled and called for a greater focus on "its new work on the development of free elections, and free markets, free press, and free labor unions in the Middle East. And above all, we will finish the historic work of democracy in Afghanistan and Iraq, so those nations can light the way for others, and help transform a troubled part of the world." [6]

Funding

The NED receives an annual appropriation from the U.S. budget and while a non-governmental organisation is subject to congressional oversight. In the financial year to the end of September 2002 NED had a budget of US$48.5 million. [7]

Personnel

Officers

Chairman: The Honorable Vin Weber is managing partner of Clark & Weinstock's Washington office. According to his profile “Weber provides strategic advice to institutions interested in issues before, and governmental processes of, the legislative and executive branches of the federal government”. [8]

Vice-Chair: Mr. Thomas R. Donahue, Senior Fellow Work in America Institute, which is described as a “non-profit organization dedicated to improving U.S. productivity and the quality of working life”. Donohue was Secretary-Treasurer of the AFL-CIO from 1979 to 1995. [9]

Treasurer: Mrs. Julie Finley, Founder, Board Member United States Committee on NATO and, according to the NED website, since 1997 “has served as co-chair of the Republican National Committee's major fundraising arm, Team 100”. [10]

Secretary: Mr. Matthew F. McHugh, according to the NED website “is currently the counselor to the president of the World Bank, a post he has held since 1993. Previously, Mr. McHugh has served as vice president and secretary to the Corporation at Cornell University”.

President: Carl Gershman, has been President of NED since April 1984. [11]

Directors of the Board includes Frank Charles Carlucci III of The Carlyle Group, General Wesley Kanne Clark, of venture capital company the Stephens Group, Michael Novak of the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research and Dr. Francis Fukuyama, Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University.

Contacts

National Endowment for Democracy
1101 Fifteenth Street, NW, Suite 700
Washington DC, 20005
Phone: 202 293-9072
Fax 202/223-6042
Web: http://www.ned.org/


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