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    3. Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening

    Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening

    ActivePublic & Society Benefit
    WASHINGTON, DC2024089450EIN: 52-19436383 filings on record
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    About Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening

    This funder is highly concentrated on international democracy promotion and election support, channeling very large gifts to the major election-assistance and party-affiliated democracy institutes. Its giving prioritizes technical electoral assistance, party-building and political process strengthening across countries, and it treats organizations with global operational reach as core partners. The foundation’s pattern is explicitly bipartisan, supporting both Republican- and Democratic-affiliated institutes alongside neutral election-technical implementers.

    Focus Areas

    International election administration and technical assistance (e.g., IFES)Bipartisan party-building and political party development (e.g., IRI, NDI)Democracy assistance and civic processes in fragile or transitioning statesCapacity support for organizations that run election observation, training, and political process programs

    Who They Fund

    civil society organizations/NGOscitizens and voterselection stakeholders (observers, officials)democratic institutions (parliaments, courts, electoral commissions)

    About Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening

    A defining feature of Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening is the size of its democracy-assistance grants: in the latest grants listed, it awarded $75,567,784 to the National Democratic Institute and $52,122,995 to the International Foundation for Electoral Systems. That scale places its grantmaking among large institutional support for election and political-process work rather than small project grants. The foundation’s recent record centers on democracy assistance, with repeated support for organizations that provide electoral technical help, political party development, and broader democratic institution strengthening. The National Democratic Institute appears as a recurring core partner, alongside the International Foundation for Electoral Systems and the International Republican Institute. Those recipients point to a pattern of backing organizations with global democracy programs and operational capacity. The foundation also shows an explicitly bipartisan posture in its portfolio, supporting both the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute. Recent awards are concentrated in Washington, DC and Arlington, VA, reinforcing that its partner network is anchored in major democracy and election-assistance institutions.

    What Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening Funds

    The foundation’s grantmaking is centered on democracy assistance, with the National Democratic Institute receiving $64,298,125 in 2024 for that purpose. In parallel, it supported the International Republican Institute with $51,707,077 in 2024, also for democracy assistance, reflecting work tied to party-building and political process strengthening. Election administration and technical assistance is another clear thread. The International Foundation for Electoral Systems received $49,677,126 in 2023 and $49,137,537 in 2024 for democracy assistance. Those awards fit a portfolio that supports organizations involved in election support, observation, and technical electoral work. A third area is sustained institutional capacity support for democratic infrastructure. The pattern of large recurring grants to these organizations suggests emphasis on organizations that can operate across countries and deliver long-term democratic process programs.

    How Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening Gives

    Financial Snapshot

    Annual Giving

    $177.7M

    Total Assets

    $6.4M

    Total Revenue

    $177.7M

    Total Expenses

    $177.7M

    Typical Grant Size

    Most grants fall between $49.7M and $64.3M, with a median of $51.7M.

    25th Percentile

    $49.7M

    Median

    $51.7M

    75th Percentile

    $64.3M

    Geographic Reach

    Regional2 states funded

    About 67% of grants go to recipients in DC.

    Funding intensity
    Low
    High
    Headquarters

    Leadership

    HALLAM FERGUSON

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    Giving Approach

    Very concentrated, high-value giving to a small set of repeat core grantees; few grants overall but extremely large award sizes, with multi-grant relationships to the same international democracy organizations.

    Funding Style

    capacity buildingadvocacy supporttechnical assistancegrantmaking to civil society

    Notable grantees: International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES), International Republican Institute (IRI), National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI), National Democratic Institute

    Topics

    democratic governancecivic participation and voter educationelection integrity and observationrule of law and institutional strengtheninganti-corruption initiatives

    The typical grant size is very large: p25 is $49,677,126, median is $51,707,077, and p75 is $64,298,125. The recent grants also show repeat awards to the same organizations across multiple years, including the National Democratic Institute, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems, and the International Republican Institute. That repetition indicates ongoing institutional support rather than one-time project funding. The foundation is classified as a regular funder, and the available data does not indicate individual funding or program-related investments.

    Where Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening Makes Grants

    Giving is heavily concentrated in the United States, with all recent grants listed going to US recipients. Washington, DC appears most often, including multiple awards to the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute. Arlington, VA also appears repeatedly through the International Foundation for Electoral Systems. The recipient country distribution shows 9 grants to US-based organizations, so the grant footprint in the available data is domestic even though the funded work is international in scope.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening

    What kinds of organizations does this foundation fund?

    It funds democracy-assistance organizations with broad operational capacity. The recent grants list includes the National Democratic Institute, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems, and the International Republican Institute, all receiving large awards for democracy assistance.

    What is a typical grant size?

    The grants are very large. The typical range in the provided data is p25 at $49,677,126, median at $51,707,077, and p75 at $64,298,125.

    Does the foundation make repeated grants to the same organizations?

    Yes. The recent grants show repeat awards across multiple years to the National Democratic Institute, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems, and the International Republican Institute, which suggests ongoing institutional support.

    Where are most recipient organizations located?

    Most recipients are in the United States, and the recipient country distribution shows 9 grants to US organizations. Washington, DC is the most common city in the list, with Arlington, VA also appearing multiple times.

    Latest 990 Filing

    2025

    Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.

    Recent Grants

    Most recent grants reported to the IRS.

    RecipientLocationAmountYearPurpose
    NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTEWASHINGTON, DC$75,567,7842025DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE
    INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR ELECTORAL SYSTEMSARLINGTON, VA$52,122,9952025DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE
    INTERNATIONAL REPUBLICAN INSTITUTEWASHINGTON, DC$49,962,3242025DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE
    NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRSWASHINGTON, DC$64,298,1252024DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE
    INTERNATIONAL REPUBLICAN INSTITUTEWASHINGTON, DC$51,707,0772024DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE
    INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR ELECTORAL SYSTEMSARLINGTON, VA$49,137,5372024DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE
    NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRSWASHINGTON, DC$65,387,4772023DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE
    INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR ELECTORAL SYSTEMSARLINGTON, VA$49,677,1262023DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE
    INTERNATIONAL REPUBLICAN INSTITUTEWASHINGTON, DC$45,718,4892023DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

    NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTE

    $75,567,784
    WASHINGTON, DC2025

    DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

    INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

    $52,122,995
    ARLINGTON, VA2025

    DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

    INTERNATIONAL REPUBLICAN INSTITUTE

    $49,962,324
    WASHINGTON, DC2025

    DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

    NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

    $64,298,125
    WASHINGTON, DC2024

    DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

    INTERNATIONAL REPUBLICAN INSTITUTE

    $51,707,077
    WASHINGTON, DC2024

    DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

    INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

    $49,137,537
    ARLINGTON, VA2024

    DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

    NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

    $65,387,477
    WASHINGTON, DC2023

    DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

    INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR ELECTORAL SYSTEMS

    $49,677,126
    ARLINGTON, VA2023

    DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

    INTERNATIONAL REPUBLICAN INSTITUTE

    $45,718,489
    WASHINGTON, DC2023

    DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE