Stand Together

Stand Together is an American philanthropic organization that was first established in 2003 and is often referred to informally as the Koch Network. It is a 501(c)(6) nonprofit organization based in Arlington, Virginia, and was founded by Charles Koch to assist philanthropic activities across the United States. Formerly known as The Seminar Network, its renaming as Stand Together was announced on May 20, 2019. The founding CEO is Brian Hooks.[1][2]

Founding and history

In 2003, Charles Koch began hosting annual meetings of business leaders and philanthropists to support various education and policy initiatives. From these seminars grew a philanthropic community of organizations working to address issues such as poverty, addiction, recidivism, gang violence and homelessness. In 2019, this advocacy organization became the Stand Together Foundation.[1][3]

As it exists today, Stand Together seeks to identify and mentor organizations addressing society’s biggest challenges. A key part of the organization’s strategy is to work through what it refers to as “key institutions of society” — education, business, communities, and government — to discover innovative ways to “remove barriers so every person can rise.”[4]

In a speech in January 2019 in Palm Springs, Charles Koch signaled he would shift away from partisan politics and focus on goals that cut across ideologies. Stand Together is considered a manifestation of those stated intentions. Charles Koch is considered less political than his brother, David Koch.[1]

Brian Hooks is the current Chairman and CEO. He previously served as executive director of the Mercatus Center at George Mason University and is also president of the Charles Koch Foundation. Other leadership members include Evan Feinberg, Amy Pelletier, and Kevin Lavelle.[5][6]

Operations

Hooks has explained the goal of Stand Together is to seek non-partisan, bottom-up solutions to societal issues, rather than focusing on partisan, top-down approaches. Founder Charles Koch has admitted that a political approach his organizations had taken in prior years proved unsuccessful and divisive. Despite this aim, some organization within the Stand Together community engage in policy and politics. In recent years, leaders of affiliated organizations have stated an intention to endorse policies and candidates regardless of political party.[7][8]

Stand Together works on a broad portfolio of issues, including education, poverty, criminal justice, immigration, free expression, trade, foreign policy, economic opportunity, technology and business as a force for good. Stand Together engages on these issues by partnering with organizations and individuals best equipped to have the greatest impact on these issues.

Founder Charles Koch and CEO Brian Hooks cite these partnerships as the key to their effectiveness. For example, to tackle an issue like drug addiction, the Stand Together community has invested in and helped scale an organization called The Phoenix. Its founder, Scott Strode, struggled with addiction before creating this recovery program that has a success rate twice as good as many clinical programs. When Stand Together met the Phoenix, they were in seven cities. Now, they are in nearly 50 and have expansion plans that would make them one of the most significant efforts in the country at a time when addiction is at an all-time high.

Similarly, on issues of policy, Stand Together led a broad bipartisan coalition on criminal justice reform — which saw leaders like Van Jones and organizations like the ACLU coming together with Senate Republicans and The Heritage Foundation – to pass the historic First Step Act in 2018. Stand Together has cited this approach as a key to its effectiveness and continues to bridge divides on this issue and many others like foreign policy and immigration.[9][10][11][12]

References

  1. Hohmann, James (May 20, 2019). "The Daily 202: The Koch network is reorganizing under a new name and with new priorities". The Washington Post. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
  2. Joanie Greve; Mariana Alfaro; The Daily 202: The Koch network is reorganizing under a new name and with new priorities; The Washington Post;
  3. Joanie Greve; Mariana Alfaro; The Daily 202: The Koch network is reorganizing under a new name and with new priorities; The Washington Post;
  4. Fredreka Schouten; Koch brothers' new group will take on poverty, educational quality; USA Today;
  5. Joanie Greve; Mariana Alfaro; The Daily 202: The Koch network is reorganizing under a new name and with new priorities; The Washington Post;
  6. Thomas, Lauren; Stitch Fix’s head of men’s clothing is leaving to become CEO of online retailer Mizzen+Main; CNBC;
  7. An American approach to the coronavirus crisis: Find innovative ways to contribute; USA Today;
  8. Schwartz, Brian; Koch network opens its doors to Democrats as it expands political engagement; CNBC;
  9. Koch-Backed Criminal Justice Reform Bill To Reach Senate; NPR;
  10. Greve, Joanie; The Koch donor network retreat turns touchy-feely; Washington Post;
  11. Steinhauer, Jennifer; Two Veterans Groups, Left and Right, Join Forces Against the Forever Wars; New York Times;
  12. Johnson, Alice; Holden, Mark; Johnson and Holden: First Step Act working – now here are the next steps in criminal justice reform; Fox News;
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