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Foundations are emphasizing their community services to counter narratives of fraud and partisanship

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 A nationwide network of charitable foundations is encouraging its members to emphasize their positive contributions to American life, a campaign aimed at quelling what it calls the 鈥済reater intensity” of scrutiny felt from the federal government and populist movements.

Popular notions of philanthropy as merely a game for the ultrawealthy to fund partisan projects and commit fraud have left the sector vulnerable to political attacks, as the Council on Foundations sees it, influencing policies that hamper essential community services. The advocacy group, which represents about 1,000 nonprofits, hopes to overcome what CEO Kathleen Enright calls the sector鈥檚 鈥減erception gap鈥 with its 鈥淕enerosity Builds鈥 campaign, launched Monday.

Enright believes most Americans don鈥檛 recognize their reliance on the charitable sector. Just about 1 in 20 adults said they or anyone in their immediate family received nonprofit services in the past year, according to a 2023 Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy report.

鈥淭his week, I got an MRI at Georgetown University Hospital, I participated in my church at St. Columba’s, my daughter was inducted into National Junior Honor Society. Four or five nonprofits have been instrumental in my life this week,” she said. 鈥淔olks just aren鈥檛 putting that tag on it.鈥

And that tag is growing increasingly important, Enright said. Last year, negotiations over included proposals to levy new taxes on private foundations that Enright said would have taken resources from communities if they made it into the final law.

The battle over defining what nonprofits actually do has recently been amplified from the highest rungs of the Trump administration, which has built with nonprofits. Trump froze, cut or threatened a sweeping range of social service grants characterized by the White House as 鈥済overnment largesse that’s often riddled with corruption, waste, fraud, and abuse.” More recently, the Department of Justice 鈥 a civil rights nonprofit accused by Republicans of targeting conservatives in its work tracking extremists 鈥 with defrauding donors through payments to informants.

Vice President JD Vance described the Ford Foundation, the Gates Foundation and the Harvard University endowment as 鈥渃ancers on American society” back as a 2021 U.S. Senate candidate, telling Tucker Carlson that 鈥渨e are actively subsidizing the people who are destroying this country and they call it a charity.鈥

鈥淎ll across our country, we have nonprofits 鈥 big foundations 鈥 that are effectively social-justice hedge funds,” he said in a talk that year on 鈥渨oke capital.鈥

Narratives about nonprofits being 鈥渙verly politicized鈥 or wasteful are 鈥渆xtreme minority stories” that don’t reflect how philanthropy operates, according to Enright.

Across many surveys, trust in the nonprofit sector has remained higher than most others. But its impact is sometimes difficult to measure and explain. The sector hasn’t faced an environment this challenging in almost six decades, according to Kathryn Thomas, the vice president of communications for the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation in Flint, Michigan.

She cited the congressional effort to increases taxes on foundations’ investment incomes and acknowledged the Trump administration’s federal funding cuts.

鈥淚n an era when everything is under partisan attack and there’s so much polarization, we really have to do a better job of emphasizing why we exist,鈥 Thomas said.

Enright said the story of philanthropy is not one where a rich person 鈥渟aves the day.鈥 She sees growing concerns about billionaires’ influence fueling suspicion about philanthropists’ motivations. Some argue the charitable sector allows moneyed interests to decide how tax dollars are spent rather than elected officials.

The campaign will emphasize that most donors 鈥渉ave just a little bit more than they need and therefore want to give back,鈥 she said, especially at the local level.

鈥淢oney does not solve problems. It鈥檚 a tool that creative people and institutions inside communities use to solve problems,鈥 she said. “The real heroes of most of these stories are nonprofit leaders, religious leaders, civic leaders who just roll up their sleeves and get something done 鈥 but do it with some financial underpinning by charitable foundations.鈥

That’s the story told by the Gulf Coast Community Foundation in Sarasota, Florida. A 10-apartment affordable housing complex for military veterans opened last year with the foundation’s support.

The area has an 鈥渆mbarrassingly high鈥 number of veterans without housing, according to Jon Thaxton, the foundation’s director of policy and advocacy. Many are priced out in Sarasota, increasingly a luxury destination with high real estate prices.

Local donors had been trying to build a similar project when they approached the foundation in 2020 for help. Thaxton secured land already vested for affordable housing, corralled $2.2 million in donations, got $800,000 from the city and won the backing of their U.S. representatives.

The foundation’s leaders believe their track record made that possible. Phillip Lanham, the president and CEO, noted the project was completed across multiple election cycles and a pandemic, suggesting that community foundations are well situated to 鈥減lay the long game.鈥

鈥淢ost people think that foundations like us deal with money and donors. We really don’t. We deal with relationships and trust,鈥 Thaxton said. 鈥淭hat’s our commodity. That’s what we earn. That’s what we save. And that’s what we contribute back to the community.鈥

The Council on Foundations will also elevate examples of early, ordinary philanthropists as part of its case for philanthropy as an integral 鈥減art of the American story.鈥

It was an 18th century sailor, Enright said, who started the country’s first charity hospital when he left his estate to establish a Boston hospital for sick and injured sailors. There’s also the formerly enslaved man who Enright credited with donating land in North Carolina that became an African Methodist Episcopal church that endures as a pillar of the local community.

Lillian Kuri, the president and CEO of the Cleveland Foundation, welcomed the focus on everyday philanthropists. The Cleveland Foundation is considered the first community foundation, established in 1914 by lawyer Frederick Harris Goff as a way to fund durable change in the city.

The foundation aims to find new ways to expand today’s tent of philanthropists dedicated to improving their surrounding areas. It announced new investments this week in a fund dedicated to turn vacant industrial land into job-ready work sites. They’ve also launched a fund that allows donors to invest in major Northeast Ohio companies, supporting local business growth while that money increases into a sizable amount that can be donated to nonprofits.

鈥淕enerosity cuts across everybody,鈥 she said, adding that community foundations offer 鈥渁 way for everyday people 鈥 not just the largest, wealthiest people 鈥 to participate in the change they want to see in their communities.”

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Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP鈥檚 collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP鈥檚 philanthropy coverage, visit .

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