Conservatism In 2006,
Max Blumenthal wrote in
The Nation that the Madison Program is not like the Center for Human Values at Princeton or the
Remarque Institute at
New York University, but rather serves as "a vehicle for conservative interests." Blumenthal writes that the Madison Program uses "funding from a shadowy, cultlike Catholic group and right-wing foundations" to support right-wing politics at Princeton University, even becoming "the blueprint for the right's strategy to extend and consolidate power within the university system." In 2017, the North Carolina–based think tank
NC Policy Watch reported that the James Madison Program is funded and operated by conservative philanthropists and academics to promote conservatism in higher education, and that the
University of North Carolina Board of Governors considered the Madison Program a "model." Her piece was cited by
Greenpeace as demonstrative of
dark money being used to deceptively promote conservative perspectives and downplay the
fossil fuel industry's role in
climate change. In 2019, journalist
Emma Green wrote in
The Atlantic that the James Madison Program serves as a conservative hub for right-wing students and academics within the "largely apolitical or vaguely liberal" politics of the Princeton University community. Student publications at Princeton University such as
The Daily Princetonian,
Nassau Weekly, and
The Princeton Progressive have described the James Madison Program as a conservative institute that "exists to further conservative viewpoints on campus" and where "Princeton's conservatives can receive cues about the status of their movement." Director Robert P. George claims the Program is not conservative, but rather "seeks to bring competing points of view together to lift the intellectual debate on campus."
Religion In the 2007 book
Faith in the Halls of Power,
D. Michael Lindsay praised the Madison Program for enabling cooperation between
Catholic and
Evangelical Christians.
Engaging with opposing views On March 14, 2017,
Robert P. George and
Cornel West issued a joint statement via the Madison Program to encourage citizens to engage with people of opposing views. The statement was opened to signatories from the public; as of March 2019, there were more than 4,000 signatories. Outlets noted its significance due to the juxtaposition of George's
Christian conservative views with West's
democratic socialist and
radical democratic views. ==References==