INVESTIGATION

$1.4 Billion. Zero Names. Your Policy.

$1.4 Billion. Zero Names. Your Policy.
By: VALOR Institute Published: April 6, 2026 Category: INVESTIGATION

A VALOR Institute Investigation into the $1.4 Billion Donor-Advised Fund Pipeline

Executive Summary

Americans across the political spectrum share a growing concern: dark money in policy is corrosive to democratic accountability. Whether the focus is foreign policy, tax law, or domestic regulation, the question remains constant: who is funding the think tanks that shape our laws, and what do those funders gain?

This investigation documents how $1.4 billion in donor-advised funds flows through a largely opaque network of policy organizations, enabling anonymous donors to influence American legislation while maintaining both donor anonymity and tax-deductible donations. Think tanks occupy a unique legal position: they offer policy influence without the transparency requirements of political organizations.

Senator Charles Grassley's bipartisan Think Tank Transparency Act—reintroduced in 2025 and again in 2026—reflects broad recognition that policy influence without donor disclosure undermines public confidence in American institutions. This is not a partisan issue. Conservative and progressive organizations alike have called for greater transparency.

Key Findings

$1.4 billion in dark money: DonorsTrust alone held $1.4 billion in net assets at the end of 2024, with $284.1 million distributed to organizations in a single year—$195.3 million of which flowed to over 300 conservative-aligned organizations.
Accelerating funding: America First Legal Foundation received $21.3 million from donor-advised funds in 2024, up from $3.2 million in 2023—a 565% increase in a single year. America First Policy Institute received $4.4 million, up from $159,000 in 2023.
Multi-billion channeling system: Fidelity Charitable, Schwab Charitable, and Vanguard Charitable combined to channel at least $171 million through donor-advised funds in 2024 alone to policy organizations with minimal funder disclosure.
Policy influence without transparency: Over one-third of the nation's top foreign policy think tanks disclose little or no information about their funding sources, yet directly shape congressional legislation and executive policy.
$206 million influence network: A single documented network distributed $206 million across 26 organizations over two decades, with defense contractors and conservative foundations funding organizations that directly shaped 201 anti-Sharia bills across 43 states and influenced executive immigration policy.

Section 1: The Dark Money Pipeline

The pipeline begins with donor-advised funds (DAFs) — charitable vehicles that allow high-net-worth individuals to receive immediate tax deductions while maintaining control over where their money ultimately flows.

Donor-Advised Fund Assets (End of 2024)

$1.4B
DonorsTrust net assets; distributed $284.1M in grants in 2024 alone

In 2024, DonorsTrust—the primary vehicle for funneling conservative dark money—distributed $195.3 million to over 300 conservative-aligned organizations.1 The growth is staggering. America First Legal Foundation, a litigation organization without traditional legislative expertise, received $21.3 million in 2024—a jump from $3.2 million in 2023. America First Policy Institute, another policy shop, jumped from $159,000 to $4.4 million in identical funding from donor-advised vehicles.2

This is not unique to DonorsTrust. Fidelity Charitable, Schwab Charitable, and Vanguard Charitable—three of the largest custodians of donor-advised funds—helped channel an estimated $171 million through their platforms to policy organizations in 2024.3 The fundamental structure remains identical: donors are shielded from public view, recipients are classified as tax-exempt policy organizations, and the policy influence is real and measurable.

The core problem is architectural. A tax-deductible donation to a think tank carries no disclosure requirement. A corporation can fund policy positions that benefit it financially while remaining anonymous. A foreign government can fund advocacy for military intervention in its region. A defense contractor can fund research promoting military spending. The American public never knows.

Over one-third of America's top foreign policy think tanks disclose little or no information about their funding sources.4 Yet these organizations write the model legislation that congressional offices introduce, conduct the polling that shapes executive branch priorities, and provide expert testimony before committees that authorize military spending and foreign policy decisions affecting millions of Americans.

Senator Grassley's Think Tank Transparency Act addresses this directly by requiring policy organizations to disclose major donors the same way corporations disclose shareholders. The bill is not ideological. It applies equally to organizations across the political spectrum. The principle is straightforward: if you are shaping American policy, Americans deserve to know who is paying you.

Section 2: Case Study—A $206 Million Influence Network

To illustrate how this pipeline operates in practice, VALOR investigated one of the most well-documented influence networks in American politics — demonstrating the full chain: anonymous donors, tax-exempt organizations, measurable policy influence, and minimal public accountability.

Network Funding Summary (2001-2019)

$206M
Distributed across 26 organizations through 35+ charitable institutions, shaping legislation across 43 states and federal policy

Funding Architecture

Between 2017 and 2019, 35 charitable institutions distributed $105.8 million to 26 organizations within this network.5 Looking back further, between 2001 and 2009, seven conservative foundations distributed $42.6 million to these same organizations.6 Total documented network funding: $206 million. Actual funding was almost certainly higher, as donor disclosure varies by organization.

The organizations at the center of this network include:

Cross-funding within the network amplified influence. Middle East Forum distributed $1.4 million to the Center for Security Policy and $1.4 million to the Institute for Policy Studies' opposition organization, multiplying the reach of donor funding.7 Donors Capital Fund, itself a pass-through vehicle for right-wing donors, distributed $6.8 million to Middle East Forum alone.8

Defense Contractor Funding

A critical component of this network's funding came from defense contractors. Boeing donated $25,000 to the Center for Security Policy; Raytheon contributed $20,000; Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics each donated $15,000.9 These donations appear modest in isolation but carried strategic significance: they came from corporations with billions of dollars in government contracts, funding organizations whose policy research influenced whether future contracts would be approved.

The conflict is structural. A think tank receiving defense contractor funding has an incentive to produce research supporting increased military spending or intervention. A donor funding that research has an incentive to keep the relationship hidden.

International Funding and Undisclosed Foreign Money

Foundation for Defense of Democracies received $2.5 million wired from the United Arab Emirates through a Canadian intermediary in 2008.10 The organization at the time was claiming that it did not accept foreign government funding. The transaction was documented in public tax filings but received minimal journalistic attention.

This case illustrates a second critical problem: the difficulty of tracking foreign government funding when it flows through intermediaries. A foreign government can fund American think tanks that influence American policy, and American citizens may never know because the money is routed through corporate entities, charitable trusts, or shell organizations.

Section 3: The Policy Impact Machine

Documented Policy Outcomes (2008-2025)

Anti-Sharia bills enacted: 201 bills in 43 states
Congressional caucus members using network research: 55+ members of Congress
Federal bills modeled on network legislation: 7+ bills introduced to Congress
Countries affected by immigration freeze influenced by network research: 39 countries

The Center for Security Policy, at the center of this network, commissioned polling conducted by Kellyanne Conway's firm. This polling, which shaped CSP's published research, was cited directly by then-candidate Donald Trump in 2015 and later used to justify the 2017 travel ban affecting Muslim-majority nations.11 The polling data itself was funded by anonymous donors. Trump cited it without disclosing that it was commissioned by a think tank funded by conservative foundations and defense contractors.

A 55-member congressional caucus built its platform on policy research produced by these organizations.12 Seven federal bills affecting immigration, national security, and foreign policy were introduced using model legislation drafted by network organizations.13

The Quincy Institute's Think Tank Funding Tracker monitors 75 foreign policy think tanks and has documented that organizations receiving funding from defense contractors and foreign governments consistently advocate for positions that benefit their funders.14

Consider Iran policy: think tanks receiving defense contractor funding have been disproportionately represented among public advocates for military escalation. Those same organizations often receive funding from regional governments that benefit from U.S.-Iran confrontation. The public sees expert testimony; it cannot see the funding relationship that created the incentive behind it.

This is the core problem: when citizens cannot see who funds the experts shaping policy, they cannot evaluate whether that expert is giving disinterested advice or advocating for a funded position.

Section 4: A Bipartisan Problem, A Bipartisan Solution

Dark money in policy is not a partisan problem. Both conservative and progressive think tanks have benefited from donor-advised fund flows that obscure their funding — and both have resisted transparency about major donors.

The solution, however, is bipartisan. Senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), who chaired the Senate Finance Committee, has made think tank transparency a signature issue. In 2025 and again in 2026, he reintroduced the Think Tank Transparency Act, which would require policy organizations to disclose major donors using the same Schedule B format that corporations use to disclose shareholders.

Congressman Jack Bergman (R-Michigan) introduced companion House legislation. The principle is simple: if you are shaping American policy, Americans deserve to know who is paying you. The legislation does not ban dark money or restrict donations — it requires only that policy organizations answer: Who funds you?

Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts has expressed support for this transparency principle. The Quincy Institute, after documenting the extent of defense contractor influence in foreign policy, has become an advocate for funding disclosure. Accountability is not partisan: every think tank — left or right — should disclose major funding sources.

Recommended Actions

Support the Think Tank Transparency Act: Legislation requiring 501(c)(3) policy organizations to file Schedule B disclosures listing donors contributing over $5,000 annually would create accountability without restricting speech or association.
Expand IRS disclosure requirements: The IRS should clarify that policy organizations receiving major donations have disclosure obligations parallel to those of corporations and political organizations.
Create a public registry: Congress should establish a searchable public database of think tank funding sources, updated annually, allowing citizens and policymakers to evaluate potential conflicts of interest.
Monitor foreign funding: The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) should expand its mandate to include foreign government funding of policy organizations shaping American national security and foreign policy.

Section 5: Methodology & Sources

Research Methodology

This investigation drew on IRS Form 990 filings, Senate Finance Committee records, OpenSecrets database records, and the Quincy Institute's Think Tank Funding Tracker. Network organizations' annual reports were cross-referenced with donor-advised fund disclosures and charitable foundation tax filings. All figures cited are drawn from public records and can be independently verified.

Primary Sources: IRS Form 990 filings (2001–2024) for DonorsTrust, Foundation for Defense of Democracies, Middle East Forum, and Center for Security Policy; Senate Finance Committee records; Center for American Progress "Fear, Inc." reports; Quincy Institute Think Tank Funding Tracker; OpenSecrets and Campaign Finance Institute records.

Conclusion

American sovereignty is meaningful only when citizens can see how power operates. When $1.4 billion flows through donor-advised funds to policy organizations, when defense contractors fund think tanks that shape military policy, when foreign governments fund organizations influencing national security decisions, and when citizens cannot see these relationships, that sovereignty becomes theoretical rather than real.

This is not an argument against think tanks or private funding of policy research. It is an argument for transparency. Conservatives who demand public accountability for government spending should apply the same standard to policy influence. Progressives who advocate for corporate transparency should apply it to think tank funding.

Senator Grassley's Think Tank Transparency Act represents a straightforward solution: require policy organizations to answer the same question that applies to every other institution seeking to shape American policy. Who is funding you? American voters deserve an answer.