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Heritage Foundation founder Feulner dies at 83

EDWIN FEULNER — HERITAGE FOUNDATION WEBSITE

EDWIN FEULNER, founder and longtime president of the influential US conservative think tank the Heritage Foundation, has died at age 83, Heritage said in a statement.

The Friday statement did not say when Mr. Feulner died or the cause.

Mr. Feulner, a Chicago-born political scientist, founded Heritage in 1973 and became its president in 1977, a position he held until 2013. Republican President Ronald Reagan awarded him the Presidential Citizens Medal in 1989.

Current Heritage president Kevin Roberts and Board of Trustees Chairman Barb Van Andel-Gaby, wrote in a joint statement that Mr. Feulner founded Heritage to plant “a flag for truth in a town too often seduced by power.”

“What started as a small outpost for conservative ideas became — under Ed’s tireless leadership — the intellectual arsenal for the Reagan Revolution and the modern conservative movement,” they wrote.

Heritage continues to deeply impact American conservatism — including being the institution that created Project 2025, widely considered the policy blueprint of President Donald J. Trump’s quick-moving second term.

Senator Mitch McConnell, a longtime leader of Congressional Republicans, wrote on social media that Feulner “was a great man” and that “his dedication to promoting peace through strength at the end of the Cold War offers a particularly enduring lesson.”

Representative Steve Scalise, a Republican and majority leader in the House of Representatives, wrote on social media that Mr. Feulner “was one of the architects who built the conservative movement in this country.” — Reuters