AEI describes itself as dedicated to “limited government, private enterprise, individual liberty and responsibility, vigilant and effective defense and foreign policies, political accountability and open debate.” Christopher DeMuth, a former White House aide to Richard Nixon and head of Ronald Reagan’s Task Force on Regulatory Relief, serves as AEI’s president. AEI’s chairman is self-made commodities billionaire Bruce Kovner, and AEI’s board of trustees is heavily loaded with current and former corporate CEOs. Scholars and fellows include Lynne Cheney, wife of the vice president, and other prominent Republicans including former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Sen. Fred Thompson, and Richard Perle, one of the most vocal supporters of the Iraq war. AEI does not disclose donors but says that in 2003 it received 36 percent of its funding from individuals, 35 percent from foundations and 23 percent from corporations.
Breakthechain.org says that its mission is "to educate people about the shortcomings of e-mail chain letters as a means to distribute information and to empower all users of the Internet to make informed, logical decisions about the information they distribute." The organization is supported by advertising income and donations from users.
Visitors can search for particular e-mail chain letters, browse them by category, or get information on the most recent viral e-mails.
Brookings is the oldest of the Washington-based “think tanks,” tracing its origins back to 1916 and founder Robert Somers Brookings, a wealthy St. Louis businessman. It has very strong academic credentials.
Reports from the institute and its scholars can be viewed by research programs, policy centers and research projects.
The list of scholars and staff tilts to the Democratic side but also includes a sprinkling of Republicans. The president of Brookings is Strobe Talbott, a former journalist and ambassador-at-large in the Clinton administration. The board of trustees includes prominent Democrats including Richard C. Blum, the husband of Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, and former Harvard University President Lawrence H. Summers, who was secretary of the treasury under President Clinton. But the board also includes Kenneth M. Duberstein, a Republican lobbyist who was President Reagan’s chief of staff in 1988-89, and corporate officials whose donations favor Republicans, such as Michael H. Jordan, CEO of EDS Corp. Brookings says it is funded by “foundations, corporations, and individuals, and to a lesser extent by endowment income.”
Cato Institute describes its work as broadening public-policy debate on “individual liberty, limited government, free markets and peace.” For the last decade, Cato has supported Social Security reform through private accounts and championed deregulation of the drug industry. Cato was founded in 1977 by Edward H. Crane, a chartered financial analyst and former vice president of Alliance Capital Management Group. Cato’s board is composed of business leaders and conservative economists, including David H. Koch, one of the largest donors to conservative causes, but it also includes former Democratic donor Richard J. Dennis, a longtime advocate of decriminalization of marijuana. Most of Cato's funding comes from private foundations and individuals, with only a small amount from corporations.
Cato argues for free markets and against taxes and government regulation. To that extent its philosophy is consistent with Republican ideology, but it also strongly rejects government infringement on individual rights and opposes broad provisions of the Patriot Act as “incompatible with civil liberties.” Extremely skeptical of foreign military intervention, Cato’s scholars also disagreed with the Bush administration’s 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Cato’s publications and reports can be explored by research area, which include defense and national security, constitutional issues, and a variety of domestic issues. The institute hosts a separate site focusing on Social Security.
The Center for Public Integrity is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that publishes investigative journalism projects on issues of public concern. The center’s mission, according to its Web site, is to “make institutional power more transparent and accountable.”
Its reports, as well as databases it compiles, are available on its site and disseminated to other journalists, as well as policymakers and scholars. The center has tackled projects in such areas as the environment, public health, lobbying and campaign finance. Investigative reports have included: “The Climate Change Lobby,” about the universe of interests seeking to shape the debate on climate change; “Tobacco Underground,” about the illicit trafficking of that substance; “The Transportation Lobby,” about the obstacles to fashioning a coherent transportation policy; and “Who’s Behind the Financial Meltdown,” about the banks behind the subprime lenders. The center encourages whistleblowers to send it information. Every four years, during a presidential election, the center publishes “The Buying of the President,” an examination of the role of money in the campaign.
A board of directors, made up mainly of prominent journalists and journalism educators, oversees the center. Its staff includes journalists, Freedom of Information Act experts, researchers and data experts. The center is funded by foundations, including the Carnegie Corporation, the Rauch Foundation, the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Park Foundation and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, according to its 2008 annual report. It doesn’t accept money from labor unions, governments or anonymous donors, but individuals also contribute.
The Center for Responsive Politics tracks political donations and their influence on public policy. It keeps an exhaustive database of all federally disclosed donations received by presidential and congressional candidates. Visitors may find, for example, how much the tobacco industry or the pharmaceutical industry has donated in a given election and to whom.
The organization accepts no money from political parties or corporations. Funding comes from the Ford, Carnegie, Joyce and Sunlight foundations and the Pew Charitable Trusts, along with individual contributions. The records maintained on the Web site are searchable by donor, recipient, state, industry, locality, year and election cycle. Visitors can find campaign finance profiles for all elected officials, which include top contributors and campaign expenditures, as well as personal financial disclosures for all election cycles in which the official participated. Visitors may also enter a ZIP code or state to see how much people who live there have donated and to whom.