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Foundation for Government Accountability

Conservative public policy think tank based in Naples, Florida From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Foundation for Government Accountability
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The Foundation for Government Accountability (FGA) is a conservative American public policy think tank based in Naples, Florida. The nonprofit organization primarily focuses on reducing the welfare state, cutting government regulations, expanding health care options, reforming election laws, reducing restrictions on teenage workers, and blocking the expansion of Medicaid at both the state and federal levels. FGA conducts policy research and its experts recommend free-market policies intended to promote work, reduce dependency, and increase opportunity. The organization was founded in 2011 by Tarren Bragdon, now FGA's CEO and president, according to FGA's website.

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History

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FGA was founded in 2011 by Tarren Bragdon, a former Maine legislator and past CEO of the Maine Heritage Policy Center. According to the organization, FGA was founded with a focus on policy reform in Florida, but the organization adapted to a multi-state focus to implement reforms that reduce government nationwide and cutting social safety net and anti-poverty programs.[3]

FGA is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. FGA states that it is primarily funded by individuals, with the remaining funding coming from foundations and businesses. In 2011, the organization's income was $212,000 and in 2012 its funding grew to $731,000. By 2018, the organization's revenue was $9,424,541.[4] The organization's latest public report, from 2023, discloses $14,351,330 in revenue.

FGA's five largest donors in 2022 were the Ed Uihlein Family Foundation, the 85 Fund, a nonprofit connected to political operative Leonard Leo, the Sarah Scaife Foundation, the Searle Freedom Trust, and Donors Trust.[3]

FGA is unlike traditional think tanks in that its primary focus is on marketing and policy messaging. Jim McGann, the director of the Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program at the University of Pennsylvania noted, "FGA isn't doing much 'thinking,' in the traditional sense. But they market policy. They push, repackage and franchise other people's ideas for implementation."[5] The FGA announced it was a part of the State Policy Network at its conference in 2013. The State Policy Network is a confederation of conservative state-level think tanks that practice what leaders call the "Ikea model" of advocacy, creating prefabricated policy projects for state officials and providing research and lobbying support to aid in legislative and administrative implementation.

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Policy issues

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Election reform

The FGA has been heavily involved in promoting conservative election reforms since the 2020 Presidential Election between Joe Biden and Donald Trump.

The Kansas City Star reported that the FGA's advocacy arm "has become a leading advocate for state bills to place restrictions on election administration."[6]

In May of 2024, the organization's CEO, Tarren Bragdon, signed onto a letter with 52 other conservative leaders in support of the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act[7]. The letter was addressed to House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and Senator Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). The SAVE Act, which is billed as a measure to prevent non-citizens from voting in federal elections, passed the U.S. House of Representatives on April 10, 2025. Four Democratic Members of Congress joined the Republican-led House in support of the SAVE Act, reported the Washington Examiner.[8]

Health care reform

Through the organization's research and educational efforts, the FGA has highlighted multiple reforms in the health care space.

A federal reform to offer patients with rare, terminal illnesses promising therapies via a streamlined FDA approval process. Known as the Promising Pathways Act, versions of the bill were championed by multiple lawmakers, including then-Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.), then-Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wisc.), and Rep. Bruce Westerman (R-Ark.).

Another example, the New Health Options Act, sponsored by Rep. Gary Palmer (R-Ala.) in 2025, aimed to compete with the Affordable Care Act to "allow individuals to have consumer choice, healthcare affordability, and price transparency," according to a statement from Rep. Palmer's office.[9]

The FGA has also promoted price transparency for hospital services nationwide and sued the Biden administration to obtain information on whether a federal transparency rule - which was enacted by the previous Trump administration - was being fully enforced, reported Healthcare Finance.

"Right to Shop" is an FGA proposal at the state level for a mechanism incentivizing patients to shop for health care services based on price and perceived value. It is based on existing programs, including a Massachusetts price transparency component and New Hampshire's Smart Shopper Program.[10] [11]

Teenage employment

The FGA has designed numerous policies to undermine or repeal parts of the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act, particularly with an eye towards expanding the legality of teenage labor. FGA's framing of these bills includes a stated commitment to expanding parental rights, expanding the US workforce, and deconstructing government regulations, stating that these bills remove a "...permission slip that inserts government in between parents and their teenager's desire to work." According to The Washington Post, the FGA "has called for reforming home-based business laws, fast-tracking permitting processes, cutting social safety nets, and creating other incentives to work." The FGA-backed legislation to eliminate government-issued teen work permits saw proposal or passage in 2023 in a number of states, including Iowa, Arkansas, Georgia, Minnesota, Ohio, and Missouri.[3]

Welfare reform

By studying and tracking the impact of different reforms, the FGA aims to describe what welfare policies have a demonstrable effect on the incomes and independence of people on welfare. The FGA conducted what describes itself as the first and most comprehensive study[12] of the impact of work requirements on able-bodied adults on food stamps. The study concluded that incomes more than doubled within a year for those who transitioned out of the program, in contrast to other studies that found far more modest or even negative gains after comparable programs imposed time limits or means-testing.[13] The study, which was promoted by Republicans, was criticized by both liberal and conservative economists for cherry-picking data, including only reporting outcomes from former food stamp recipients who found jobs after losing benefits.[5]

FGA supports work requirements tied to food stamps. The organization advocated for welfare changes in several different states before beginning to advocate for changes at a federal level in 2017. FGA supports legislation that would require able-bodied individuals between the ages of 18 and 60 to work or attend training programs for 20 hours each week in order to receive benefits.[5]

Medicaid expansion

Blocking Medicaid expansion has been a longtime project of the FGA, as it sees Medicaid spending under the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, as unsustainable, threatening both state budgets and the services provided to traditional Medicaid patients.[14] One study[15] developed a measure of "right-wing network strength" based on activity by organizations including the FGA, and found via linear regression that this measure was a statistically significant factor in whether or not a state expanded the program.

Right to Shop

Right to Shop is an FGA proposal for a mechanism incentivizing patients to shop for health care services based on price and perceived value. It is based on existing programs, including a Massachusetts price transparency component[10] and New Hampshire's Smart Shopper program.[11][16]

Project 2025

FGA is a member of the advisory board of Project 2025,[17] a collection of conservative and right-wing policy proposals from the Heritage Foundation to reshape the United States federal government and consolidate executive power should the Republican nominee win the 2024 presidential election.[18]

One Big Beautiful Bill Act

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act was signed into law by President Trump on July 4, 2025.

As the bill made its way through Congress, the FGA provided research, polling data, op-eds, blog posts, social media content, and expert testimony to educate Members of Congress - and the American public - on key components within the legislation.The One Big Beautiful Bill Act made sweeping changes on multiple fronts, including in welfare programs.

FGA has been a longtime supporter of work requirements for able-bodied adults in programs like Medicaid, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and public housing. Among the research provided by FGA is a paper released on June 18, 2025, entitled "House-Proposed Work Requirements Would Protect the Truly Needy, Reduce Dependency, and Grow the Economy."

On June 25, 2025, testifying before the House Budget Committee in a hearing on Medicaid, Nick Stehle, FGA's vice president of communications, said: "Choosing not to act is relegating the program to putting the truly needy last and fraudsters, illegal aliens, and able-bodied adults who sit at home first - all while taxpayers foot the bill for an ever growing program."[19]

Jonathan Ingram, the organization's vice president of policy and research, was quoted by CNN on the issue. "If you are an able-bodied adult and there's no expectation of you to work or train or volunteer in any way, there's going to be a large number who don't," he said.[20]

The Center for Excellence in Polling, a polling project by FGA, found through a nationwide survey that 73 percent of likely voters "support requiring able-bodied adults with no young children at home to work, train, or volunteer at least part time to maintain eligibility for Medicaid." The organization's polling efforts buoyed the effort to pass work requirements.[21]

FGA remained active throughout the debate on the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and intends to provide guidance to states on implementing the bill's reforms.

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References

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