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These Project 2025 creators are now shaping Trump admin policies

More than a dozen people in Trump's administration helped create the sweeping plan to overhaul the federal government.

by Aleksandra Wrona, Published Dec. 16, 2025


Two white men are picked on either side. A project cover is shown in-between them that says "Mandate for Leadership THE CONSERVATIVE PROMISE."

Image courtesy of Getty Images/Snopes


During Donald Trump's second presidential term, his administration not only enacted many policy recommendations that aligned with the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025 but it also hired several people who created the conservative plan to overhaul the federal government.

These hires included officials from Trump's first presidential administration and conservative leaders such as Russell Vought, Tom Homan, Stephen Miller and Lindsey Burke, all of whom helped draft the nearly 1,000-page policy blueprint at the center of Project 2025.

The Trump administration has consistently denied claims that the initiative is guiding its policy-making. Trump himself has not mentioned Project 2025 in verbal or written comments as president, aside from one Truth Social post (archived here) about Vought.

Below, we list more than a dozen high-profile people who were associated with the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025 and are now part of the Trump administration.

Snopes reached out to the White House to learn more about the president's process for filling the below-listed positions and seek its response to claims that it is helping Project 2025 become reality with the hirings. We will update this story if we receive a response. 

In mid-December 2025, the Heritage Foundation sent an email to members that said it was planning to "work with the Trump administration" to enact its latest set of proposals.

Project 2025 contributors in Trump admin 

We compiled this list by reviewing reporting on Trump's hires by reputable outlets, including Snopes, and cross-referencing that information with people named in Project 2025's nearly 1,000-page document, dubbed the "Mandate for Leadership." 

The list does not aim to be exhaustive. It highlights some of the most prominent people who worked on Project 2025 and their positions in the Trump administration as of December 2025.

They are listed in no particular order.

At least one person who worked on Project 2025 and served in Trump's second presidential administration has left the federal position.

Gene Hamilton authored a chapter in the Project 2025 document that called for defunding the Department of Justice, among other things, and he served as part of the White House counsel between January 2025 and early June 2025. In June, he rejoined America First Legal, Stephen Miller's legal advocacy group, as president of the organization.

Also, according to a November 2024 Politico report that cited anonymous sources within the Trump administration, Trump officials rejected requests by anti-abortion lobbying groups to pick Project 2025 author Roger Severino as Health and Human Services deputy secretary. Jim O'Neill, a former investor, holds that position reporting to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Project 2025 leaders created a 'conservative LinkedIn'

In late 2024, as Trump released nominations for seats in his second presidential administration, claims surfaced that he was scouting people behind Project 2025 — and that past comments by him alleging no connection to the effort were untrue.

In response to the criticism, then-transition team spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said to journalists in a statement, "President Trump never had anything to do with Project 2025. All of President Trump's Cabinet nominees and appointments are whole-heartedly committed to President Trump's agenda, not the agenda of outside groups."

Around the same time, reports claimed Trump was working with Project 2025 leaders to use a personnel database that they created to staff his administration. Spencer Chretien, associate director of Project 2025, once called the database a "conservative LinkedIn;" it was a roster of people who identify as conservative and Project 2025 leaders saw as potential hires in the federal government to fulfill the president's agenda.

We reached out to the White House for its response to claims that it relied on the Project 2025 personnel database to staff the current administration, including the positions listed above. A spokesperson denied the administration's use of it and did not respond to our other questions about hiring procedures. 

A few months into Trump's second term, Paul Dans, a chief architect of Project 2025, expressed satisfaction with how Trump's actions aligned with the initiative's vision. In a March 2025 interview with Politico, Dans said he was "delighted" that Trump was implementing "his agenda after all," adding that the president's policies were beyond his "wildest dreams."


By Aleksandra Wrona

Aleksandra Wrona is a reporting fellow for Snopes, based in the Warsaw, Poland, area.


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