Our Services
Federal humanitarian funding has been under unprecedented pressure. The organizations that navigate it successfully are the ones who understand the appropriations process, the foreign assistance accounts, and the political coalitions that keep this work funded — and have the relationships to act on all three. We bring all three.
Schedule a ConsultationWe represent the sovereign governments, NGOs, foundations, and global health stakeholders whose work depends on U.S. federal funding — across the full appropriations cycle, the relevant executive branch agencies, and the bipartisan coalitions that keep humanitarian work funded.
Humanitarian funding in Washington isn't won by deserving the most — it's won by understanding the appropriations process, the political coalitions, and the moment when intervention changes outcomes. We operate in all three dimensions.
01
Our president served on the State & Foreign Operations Subcommittee — the appropriations panel that funds every dollar of U.S. foreign assistance, from USAID to PEPFAR to refugee aid. We don't have to learn these accounts. We helped shape them.
02
Humanitarian funding survives in Washington only when it maintains bipartisan support — and that's been harder to defend in recent cycles. We approach this work with bipartisan coalitions in mind, because that's the architecture that actually delivers durable funding outcomes year after year.
03
Our work in humanitarian causes is not transactional. Our president co-chairs Operation End Starvation, a bipartisan campaign on global hunger. We understand the moral case for this work because we make it ourselves — and that alignment shapes how we advocate for clients in this space.
The organizations that protect federal funding through political shifts aren't lucky — they're prepared. Let's talk about your priorities and how we make sure they survive the next appropriations cycle.
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