American Economic Liberties Project Email Format
Non-profit OrganizationsDistrict of Columbia, United States11-50 Employees
The American Economic Liberties Project is a non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C., founded in February 2020 to translate the intellectual gains of the anti-monopoly movement into concrete policy changes addressing concentrated economic power. Led by Sarah Miller, a recognized figure in antitrust advocacy, the organization has grown into a collaborative hub for policy experts and advocates across areas affected by concentration, including community development, national security, and entrepreneurship. Its work centers on urging the government to reassert core policy tools—aggressive investigatory agendas, robust antitrust enforcement, anti-corruption measures, corporate accountability, and a reinvigorated administrative state—to challenge monopolies’ dominance over markets and society. The group’s target audience consists of policymakers and public institutions seeking governance reforms to counter concentrated power, and it operates as a non-profit, non-partisan entity that does not accept corporate funding; instead, it relies on foundations and individuals. Based in Washington, D.C., it is described as a small-to-mid-sized nonprofit with a growing network of allies. In March 2026, Economic Liberties announced the Antitrust Accountability and Transparency Act, a proposed measure intended to restore judicial oversight of antitrust settlements and curb executive branch overreach.