Boom—@POTUS opens the #SummitforDemocracy by unveiling his Initiative for Democratic Renewal—a plan to invest $424mn in a flotilla of 29 funds/programs to support independent media, anticorruption, democratic reformers, free internet, & electoral integrity!whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/…
1⃣ Independent Media
@USAID will:
✅ Give $30mn to @FundFreeMedia
✅ Spend $5mn launching a Media Viability Accelerator
✅ Spent $9mn on a Defamation Defense Fund
@StateDept will:
✅ Dedicate $3.5mn to a Journalism Protection Platform
✅ Engage with the Media Freedom Coalition
2⃣ Anticorruption
@USAID to launch programs w/ $5mn protecting whistleblowers/activists, $16mn on transnational corruption, $12mn on resilient policy, $18mn on rapid response.
@StateDept spends $15mn against safe havens, $7mn on PPPs.
@StateDept will spend:
✅ $5mn on a LGBTQI+ fund
✅ $10mn for embattled CSOs
✅ $1mn for career pros in closed spaces
@USAID will spend:
✅ $15mn for nonviolent social movements
USG will spend:
✅ $34mn on women's rights/rep
✅ $122mn empowering workers
4⃣ Technology
USG will:
✅ Strengthen @FO_Coalition
✅ Provide $4mn on prize competitions for democracy tech
✅ Launch an export controls and human rights initiative
@USAID will:
✅ Dedicate $20mn to digital ecosystems
@StateDept will:
✅ Provide $4mn for anti-censorship tech
5⃣ Electoral Integrity
@USAID will:
✅ Provide $3mn to launch a Coalition for Securing Electoral Integrity to develop and promote norms, principles, and codes of conduct
✅ Provide $18mn to establish a Defending Democratic Elections Fund to pilot, scale, and apply good responses
6⃣ Cross-cutting
@USAID will provide $55mn to a new flexible global fund to surge assistance to reform-minded partner governments as countries experience democratic transitions.
The amount of energy and creativity that the @WhiteHouse, @USAID, and @StateDept have poured into this is breathtaking. It probably includes lots of ideas that career staff had over the past four years but couldn’t get support. Call it Biden’s 29 Points to Save Democracy. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
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"Corruption…is a form of financial alchemy…transformation of power into illicit money or illicit money into power…bad actors usually need an intermediary: a shell company, real estate transaction, art purchase."
"For this reason, combatting corruption is not just the work of the justice ministries…It is also the work of finance ministries…And we believe that our finance ministry, in particular—@USTreasury—must play a leading role."
"There’s a good argument that, right now, the best place to hide and launder ill-gotten gains is actually the United States."
Boom—@PowerUSAID launches a Grand Challenge to combat transnational corruption!
This is a big global initiative. Over the past decade, ten @USAID Grand Challenges have funded 450 innovations in 60 countries, bringing in new voices to solve monumental development problems. 👏👏👏
Have an idea for a new tool to detect, track, and disrupt corruption that cuts across borders?
You should participate in the design/co-creation process, host an event, fund a call for innovations, support a prize competition, or provide mentorship to innovators across the globe.
Of the 76 lines of effort announced by the administration today, the single strongest potential move is this one that @TreasuryDepSec just emphasized in his remarks. It's easy to gloss over. A FinCEN advance notice of proposed rulemaking on real estate. But it could be historic.
I recently wrote that "In the modern history of the U.S. Treasury Department, no regulatory decision has done more to let dirty money flow with impunity than the 2002 exemption for real estate professionals [from the anti-money laundering rules enacted after 9/11]."
Today, the White House, FinCEN, and the Treasury Deputy Secretary all made a point of underscoring—at varying levels of detail—that two decades is long enough and so they’re not necessarily limiting their work on real estate transparency to title insurance companies.
It's esp. focused on the transnational dimensions and ability to launder the proceeds of corruption (pillar 2⃣ is the most important), but it's a whole-of-government strategy with five pillars:
1⃣ US government
2⃣ Illicit finance
3⃣ Accountability
4⃣ Multilateral
5⃣ Foreign aid
Treasury just issued this media advisory on @TreasuryDepSec's speech at 10am Monday, which will unveil Treasury's anti-corruption plans. They're banging the war drum.
The strength of Treasury policies depends a lot on the details, so here's a thread reviewing my recommendations.
Let's start with what @IanTalley and @dnvolz reported last night, which is that in addition to sanctions, Treasury will be taking actions this week to increase the transparency of corporate ownership and close loopholes in the real estate market. wsj.com/articles/u-s-t…
With regards to beneficial ownership, FinCEN is expected to release the rule that they've been drafting most of this year prescribing which entities will have to report their ownership information to Treasury. OIRA completed its final review of the draft rule four days ago (⬇️).
Boom—lawmakers to respond to the #PandoraPapers with landmark bipartisan legislation that would make professional enablers watch out for dirty money! 🧵politico.com/news/2021/10/0…
The ENABLERS Act—to be introduced Friday—would require lawyers, investment advisers, art dealers, realtors, accountants, PR firms, and others to ensure their clients' money isn't of suspicious origin. That's exactly what's recommended by my recent research!securingdemocracy.gmfus.org/regulating-the…
And it makes sense that it's inspired by the #PandoraPapers, because the leaked revelations implicate all these enablers. Here are 4⃣ US-tied examples involving trust administrators, financial advisors, real estate professionals, art dealers, and law firms.icij.org/investigations…