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William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

631000000
Funded organizations:
Stiftung Neue Verantwortung (SNV), German Marshall Fund of the United...See all
Stiftung Neue Verantwortung (SNV), German Marshall Fund of the United States See less

Created in 1966 by HP co-founder Bill Hewlett and his wife Flora, the Hewlett Foundation is headquartered in Menlo Park and ranks among the wealthiest private philanthropies, reporting $13.3 billion in assets and $602 million in grants awarded during 2023. Its Democracy, Rights & Governance portfolio, first assembled under Kelly Born, finances policy NGOs on both sides of the Atlantic. German think-tank Stiftung Neue Verantwortung (SNV) has received six Hewlett awards since 2016, notably $100,000 (2017) and $50,000 (2018) for research on the spread and impact of misinformation, plus $500,000 (2023) in unrestricted core support. Earlier line-items fund SNV’s cybersecurity and transatlantic digital-policy work. Hewlett’s separate Cyber Initiative has deployed $130 million globally to strengthen the field and steer policy debates on platform accountability and state cyber-strategy. Hewlett has also awarded $3,150,000 to the German Marshall Fund’s Alliance for Securing Democracy program (2018–2026), as well as a total of $600,000 to the Digital Innovation and Democracy Initiative through two grants (2019 and 2022). Collectively, these grants position Hewlett as a leading U.S. source of support for German and EU digital “governance” actors.

Commentary:
Hewlett’s German outlays are small next to its U.S. democracy grants yet strategically significant. By underwriting SNV’s misinformation research in 2017-18 and delivering a half-million-dollar core grant in 2023, the foundation aligns Berlin’s policy discourse with transatlantic security priorities (alleged foreign interference, Kremlin propaganda) while leaving Germany’s own NetzDG over-blocking largely unexamined. The imbalance reflects Hewlett’s ideological arc: grant narratives emphasize "resilience" but rarely confront overreach by core EU states aligned with Washington geopolitical aims. Oversight remains private; decisions rest with a California-based board directing a multi-billion-dollar endowment, beyond Bundestag or European Parliament scrutiny. In effect, Bay-Area capital helps script the norms that Brussels later codifies in the Digital Services Act, all via ostensibly independent intermediaries. The outcome is a soft-power channel running west-to-east, one that shapes Europe’s censorship regime while safeguarding the foundation from direct political accountability.

About the organization

Began content controls: 

2017

Status:
Active
Funder
de_DE_formalDeutsch (Sie)

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