If you thought Project 2025 was bad, wait, there’s more: It’s continuing into 2026. The Heritage Foundation , the far-right think tank that created Project 2025, has posted its priorities for 2026, and while it’s not calling this Project 2026, that’s basically what it is. It’s officially a list of the foundation’s priorities for 2025-2026, under the title “Restoring America’s Promise.” It was published in February but has recently received new attention due to social media posts dubbing it Project 2026. “Project 2025 was an effort of more than 100 organizations convened by Heritage to prepare for the next conservative administration,” a Heritage spokesperson told Newsweek. “That administration is now in office, so all policy and personnel decisions are up to the president and his team. … There is no Project 2026 and will not be, regardless of what leftist lunatics make up on BlueSky.” “Restoring America’s Promise” is fairly brief, especially as compared to Project 2025, which took up 900 pages. It has nine sections, including “Counter the CCP” — the Chinese Communist Party — “Unleash American Energy,” “Eliminate Regulation, Inflation, and Spending,” and “Root Out the Deep State,” “deep state” being the extreme right’s term for career federal workers who are supposedly undermining conservative plans. Related: Project 2025: A blueprint for the oppression of LGBTQ+ Americans The sections most relevant to LGBTQ+ people are “Put Family First” and “Expand Education Freedom.” “Every child conceived deserves to be born to a married mother and father who will love, guide, and protect them throughout their lives,” the former says. “But family breakdown and rampant abortion tears at the soul of our country and saps it of strength and moral authority. Radical ideologies that deny social and biological truths about sexual embodiment, marriage, and unborn life poison our courts, our culture, and our laws.” The section on education begins, “The education system is failing our children — from the scourge of woke ideas like critical race theory and radical gender ideology to the lack of academic excellence and transparency.” It goes on to promote school choice — which is usually subsidies for parents who want to send their children to private schools — and issue a call to “reclaim institutions of higher education from the radical Left.” Also, Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts promoted what he calls “Heritage 2.0” at Turning Point USA’s America Fest last Friday. He said it will consist of these policy priorities: “The American Family,” “The Dignity of Work and the Future of Free Enterprise,” “National Security,” and “The American Heritage and Citizenship,” according to The Daily Signal, a conservative outlet. He further praised “the great successes of the Trump-Vance administration.” Donald Trump tried to distance himself from Project 2025 during his presidential campaign, but his administration has implemented many Project 2025 ideas. Related: Project 2025's creator is 'ecstatic' over Trump's terrible cabinet picks However, the Heritage Foundation may be falling apart. Roberts used the term “Heritage 2.0” in a recent email to staff as well after the recent departure of several key Heritage employees and board members, conservative publication National Review reports. National Review headlined its story “The Heritage Foundation Implodes.” At least a dozen employees left or were fired, Reuters reports. This included almost the entire legal and economic departments, according to National Review. The sticking point for some was Roberts’s support of podcaster and former Fox News host Tucker Carlson . Carlson hosted white supremacist Nick Fuentes on his show in October, and they expressed “mutual opposition to U.S. support of Israel, a view at odds with that of many conservatives,” Reuters notes. Carlson has said his position is not anti-Semitic. Fuentes, however, has said that “organized Jewry” is undermining white culture, and he has said he admires Adolf Hitler. Roberts then posted a video saying a “venomous coalition” was attacking Carlson. He later apologized for using that term, which some Jewish people consider anti-Semitic. He also told Heritage staffers he did not support Fuentes but hoped to “convert” some of his acolytes, according to Reuters. Robert P. George, a prominent legal scholar, left the board after demanding a retraction of Roberts’s video, which was not forthcoming, Politico reports. Josh Blackman, a staff member who contributed to Project 2025, said in his resignation letter that he left because the video “aligned the Heritage Foundation with the rising tide of antisemitism on the right.” “A Heritage Foundation that was once synonymous with free markets, the rule of law, and a strong national defense has, to a large extent, abandoned or downgraded those things in pursuit of newer, populist ideological fashions in an apparent finger-in-the-wind attempt to stay in the good graces of the power brokers of the new right,” in the opinion of National Review. Many who’ve left have gone to Advancing American Freedom , founded by former Vice President Mike Pence . National Review calls Advancing American Freedom an “organization that is unbendingly committed to markets, constitutionalism, traditional values, and peace through strength — and has no truck with antisemitism.” However, a glance at its website shows it is just as anti-LGBTQ+ as other right-wing groups, opposing what it calls "gender indoctrination" and more.