American Economic Liberties Project
William J McGee is a Senior Fellow for Aviation and Travel at the American Economic Liberties Project. William J is also a novelist and has been recognized as a semi-finalist in both the William Faulkner Creative Writing Competition and the James Jones First Novel Fellowship. With a background in investigative journalism, William has worked for various reputable publications such as Consumer Reports, USAToday.com, Conde Nast Traveler Magazine, and more. Additionally, William J has experience teaching creative writing at Hofstra University and Vaughn College of Aeronautics and Technology. William also served as a member of the U.S. Department of Transportation Future of Aviation Advisory Committee.
American Economic Liberties Project
The American Economic Liberties Project launched in February 2020 to help translate the intellectual victories of the anti-monopoly movement into momentum towards concrete, wide-ranging policy changes that begin to address today’s crisis of concentrated economic power. Economic Liberties is led by Sarah Miller, who served as the Deputy Director of the Open Markets Institute and has been recognized as “one of the primary architects of the modern antitrust movement.” As concern over concentrated economic power has broadened beyond the community of antitrust reformers, Economic Liberties has quickly grown into a hub for organizing a diverse set of leading policy experts and advocates in areas impacted by concentrated power, ranging from community development to national security to entrepreneurship. Working together with a growing network of allies, we call on the government to re-assert essential policy tools — like aggressive investigatory agendas, robust antitrust enforcement, anti-corruption measures, corporate accountability, and a reinvigorated administrative state — to challenge monopolies’ dominance over markets and society. We are non-profit and non-partisan and do not accept any funding from corporations. Contributions and grants from foundations and individuals pay for the work we do.