Lexington Institute
The Lexington Institute is a center-right think tank headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, United States. It focuses mainly on defense and security policy.[2]
Established | 1998 |
---|---|
Key people | Merrick Carey Loren Thompson Daniel Goure John Cicchitti Sarah White |
Budget | Revenue: $2,136,371 Expenses: $2,066,977 (FYE December 2015)[1] |
Location | 1600 Wilson Boulevard Arlington, Virginia |
Website | www |
History, staff, and positions
The Lexington Institute was founded in 1998 by former U.S. Representative James Courter (R-NJ), former congressional aide Merrick "Mac" Carey, and former Georgetown University professor Loren B. Thompson, who are the chairman, chief executive officer and chief operating officer of the Institute, respectively.[2]
The think tank is based in Arlington, Virginia[3] and focuses on defense, regulatory policy and logistics.[4] It is sometimes described as conservative.[5]
The Lexington Institute is funded in large part by military contractors and other corporations.[6] The institute has gradually moved away from advocating for education reform while retaining its focus on national defense, particularly with regard to technology investment.
The Institute has been criticized for its financial relationship with the defense industry; Harper's Magazine called the organization the industry's "pay-to-play ad agency" based on its usually favorable assessments of military weapons programs.[7] Loren Thompson is also a consultant to military contractors.[8]
In 2011, Thompson said that the current rate of U.S. defense spending was not sustainable.[9] He has also called for a shift in American defense spending towards items such as the Littoral Combat Ship and the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II that can be exported to allies.[6]
Thompson wrote that in 2011 that most of the candidates for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination were "unsuited to high office."[10]
The Lexington Institute also researches electricity policy and the US electricity grid, including on issues such as electric grid security, resiliency, the effect of electric vehicles, and distributed generation incentives, and issues relating to data privacy and cyber threat information-sharing.[11]
References
- "The Lexington Institute" (PDF). Foundation Center. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
- "Biographical Information". Lexington Institute.
- Lolita C. Baldor, Stealthy jet ensures other war-fighting aircraft survive, Associated Press (July 21, 2015): "Loren Thompson, head of the Arlington, Virginia-based Lexington Institute, a think tank."
- Darlene Superville & Matt O'Brien, Trump: Administration to review Pentagon computer contract, Associated Press (July 18, 2019): "Daniel Goure, vice president of the Lexington Institute, a defense-oriented think tank based in Virginia"
- Jeffrey A. Dvorkin, NPR: Mysteries of the Organization, Part I, NPR (December 14, 2005).
- Korb, Lawrence; Thompson, Loren (18 August 2010). "The U.S. can't afford unilateral military moves abroad". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- Ken Silverstein (April 2010). "Mad men: Introducing the defense industry's pay-to-play ad agency". Harper's Magazine. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- Gray, Tim (15 April 2020). "How to Invest in the Military-Industrial Complex". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
- Spires, Shelby G. "Expert: Federal spending freeze beats alternative." The Telegraph (Macon, Georgia), 7 February 2011.
- Thompson, Loren B. (November 10, 2011). "If Republicans Don't Pick Romney, Obama Will Win Reelection In A Landslide". lexingtoninstitute.org. Arlington, Virginia: Lexington Institute.
- See e.g. articles under "Energy" at the Lexington Institute website.