Fraser Institute & Atlas Network
The Fraser Institute is one of approximately 500 think tanks in the Atlas Network — a US-headquartered federation funded by Koch Foundations, Donors Trust, Searle Freedom Trust, and corporate sponsors. Canadian sister member-orgs: Macdonald-Laurier Institute, Montreal Economic Institute, Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms. The pipeline is on the public Atlas membership directory.
1. What the Fraser Institute is
The Fraser Institute is a Vancouver-based registered Canadian charity founded in 1974 by economist Michael Walker. Mandate: free-market / classical-liberal economic policy research, public-policy advocacy, and education. Files annual T3010 returns with the CRA Charities Directorate; publicly discloses corporate-sponsor categories in its annual reports.
Notable outputs include the annual Economic Freedom of the World Index (since 1996), the Fraser Institute School Report Cards, provincial fiscal-performance rankings, tax-burden calculations (the "Tax Freedom Day" series), and energy / pipeline / carbon-tax policy briefs. Its publications form a substantial proportion of the conservative- and business-press commentary feed in Canada.
The Institute's current president is Niels Veldhuis; its leadership has historically included economists with cross-appointments at Canadian universities. Past contributors and board members have included senior Canadian business and academic figures.
2. What the Atlas Network is
The Atlas Network (formerly Atlas Economic Research Foundation) is a US-headquartered federation of free-market think tanks, registered in Arlington, Virginia, founded in 1981 by Antony Fisher (a British businessman who had earlier founded the UK's Institute of Economic Affairs). Atlas does not directly conduct policy research; it functions as the infrastructure layer for the global think-tank network, providing:
- Grant-making to member institutes via competitive funding programmes (Smith Family Foundation Free-Market Award, Templeton Freedom Awards).
- Atlas Leadership Academy — a training programme for think-tank executives, communications staff, and policy entrepreneurs.
- Annual Liberty Forum & Freedom Dinner — the central convening event of the network, with member-institute representatives from every continent.
- Publishing infrastructure — cross-network research and op-ed distribution.
Atlas's own US Form 990 filings are publicly available via charity-monitoring services (ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer, GuideStar). The form 990 lists annual revenue, principal funders by giving-level category, and named directors. The membership directory (currently listing ~500 institutes worldwide) is published on the Atlas public website.
3. The funding pipeline — named US donors
Atlas's documented donor base (US Form 990 record)
Atlas Network's principal documented funders, repeatedly identified in its US Form 990 filings and in the academic / journalistic literature on the global think-tank funding network, include:
- Charles Koch Foundation & affiliated Koch-network donor entities
- Donors Trust / DonorsCapitalFund — donor-advised-fund vehicles often used to anonymise Koch-network giving
- Searle Freedom Trust
- John Templeton Foundation
- Sarah Scaife Foundation & affiliated Scaife-family entities
- ExxonMobil Foundation (historically; level varies year-to-year)
The funding flows from these donors to Atlas, and from Atlas (in turn) to member institutes via grants, training subsidies, and shared infrastructure. The downstream result is that a Canadian Atlas-member institute may receive Atlas-routed funding that originated with one of the named US donors above — a pipeline structure that is on the public 990 filings but is rarely broken out publicly at the per-grant level.
SRC: Atlas Network Form 990 filings (ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer); academic literature on think-tank funding networks (e.g. Mayer, Stahl, Mirowski)Fraser Institute's Canadian-side funding
Fraser's annual reports disclose corporate-donor categories: oil and gas (Imperial Oil, Encana / Ovintiv historically, Canadian Natural Resources, Suncor), banking and finance (Canadian chartered banks, mutual-fund houses), mining and forestry, and individual donors. The donor lists are typically reported by giving-tier rather than per-donor, but the major categories are public. The Institute does not publish per-donor amounts in detail. For Atlas-routed funding, the public record is the Atlas 990 filing rather than Fraser's own disclosure.
SRC: Fraser Institute Annual Reports; CRA T3010 returns; cross-reference Atlas Network Form 9904. Atlas's Canadian member network
The Atlas Network's public membership directory lists multiple Canadian member-organisations. The four most active are:
Fraser Institute
Free-market policy research and advocacy. Annual Economic Freedom of the World Index. Provincial fiscal rankings. Tax Freedom Day. Long-time Atlas member; founder Michael Walker active in early Atlas Liberty Forum convenings.
Macdonald-Laurier Institute (MLI)
Founded by Brian Lee Crowley. Atlas Network member-org. Active on national-security, foreign-policy (especially Indo-Pacific and PRC), Indigenous-policy, and federal-fiscal briefs. Receives grants from Atlas-network programmes.
Montreal Economic Institute (MEI / IEDM)
Quebec-side free-market policy advocate. Atlas Network member. Active on Quebec health-care, language, and provincial-fiscal policy in addition to federal briefs.
Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms (JCCF)
Founded by John Carpay. Atlas Network member. Litigates constitutional cases, particularly on Charter s.2(b) freedom-of-expression and s.2(a) freedom-of-conscience matters. High visibility during the COVID-period public-health-order litigation.
5. The international think-tank-export pattern
The Atlas-network architecture is documented in the academic political-science literature on think-tank funding. The pattern across decades and across countries is consistent and observable:
- Bottom-up grant making — member institutes apply for Atlas grants on specific policy briefs (climate-skepticism, tax-cut advocacy, deregulation, energy-policy criticism). Successful applicants receive funding plus access to network research.
- Standardised methodology exports — the Economic Freedom of the World Index, originally a Fraser product, has been adopted as the headline cross-country economic-policy ranking for the network. Member institutes localise it.
- Talent-pipeline training — Atlas Leadership Academy graduates form a cross-border professional cohort that staffs member institutes, lobbying organisations, and (in some cases) political offices.
- Climate-policy skepticism is the network's signature output — a substantial academic and journalistic literature has documented the role of Atlas-network institutes in opposing carbon pricing, federal climate regulation, and energy-transition policy across Anglosphere democracies.
For Canadian readers, the implication is that Fraser, MLI, MEI, and JCCF are not standalone domestic think tanks: they sit inside a transnational network whose infrastructure layer is funded outside Canada and whose policy outputs are coordinated across the network via grant programmes and shared research.
6. Timeline (compressed)
7. The structural questions the record raises
Editorial framing.
The structural questions for the Conservative-aligned think-tank infrastructure mirror those raised about the Liberal-aligned infrastructure in the registry's other dossiers:
- Foreign funding through an intermediary. Atlas Network is US-registered, funded by US donors, and in turn funds Canadian Atlas-member institutes. The pipeline is transparent at the Atlas-990 layer but rarely broken out at the per-grant Canadian-disclosure layer. Is the existing CRA T3010 / Lobbying Commissioner regime adequate to make the foreign-funding flow visible to Canadian readers?
- Standardised policy outputs. The Economic Freedom of the World Index, the climate-skepticism brief library, and the tax-cut advocacy templates are network-wide, not Canada-specific. Do the resulting Canadian policy interventions reflect Canadian conditions or imported templates?
- Litigation-aligned policy. JCCF's litigation strategy interlocks with the network's broader policy posture. Is the litigation-and-think-tank pairing adequately disclosed when JCCF cases reach Canadian appellate courts?
- Bipartisan-symmetry test. The same questions the registry applies to Liberal-aligned foundations and charities (Trudeau Foundation, WE, AKFC) apply equally to Atlas-network member institutes. The dossier's posture is that both axes are public-record critique, applied symmetrically.
8. What this page does not assert
Editorial framing.
This page does not assert that the Fraser Institute, Atlas Network, MLI, MEI, or JCCF are acting outside their lawful charitable or non-profit purposes. It does not assert that the Koch Foundations, Donors Trust, Searle Freedom Trust, or any other named donor has done anything illegal — private philanthropy is legal, and naming a donor is not an imputation of misconduct. It does not assert that any individual policy position taken by any Atlas-network institute is wrong on the merits; the freedom to advocate free-market policy is a legitimate Charter-protected activity.
This page asserts only what the public record contains: the Atlas Network's existence, its member directory, its US Form 990 disclosures, the Canadian member-orgs' Atlas membership status, and the network's documented role as funding-and-training infrastructure for free-market policy advocacy across Canada and other Anglosphere democracies.
Related dossiers
Primary sources
- Atlas Network — official site & member directory
- ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer — Atlas Network & affiliated 990 filings
- Fraser Institute — official site & annual reports
- Macdonald-Laurier Institute — official site
- Montreal Economic Institute / Institut économique de Montréal
- Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms
- CRA Charities Directorate — T3010 returns