Abbreviation

MLI

2010[1]

Public policy think tank

323 Chapel Street, Suite #300, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 7Z2, Canada

Brian Lee Crowley, Managing Director[2]

Impact[edit]

The Macdonald-Laurier Institute has been ranked among the top three Canadian think tanks in the Global Go To Think Tanks Report produced by the University of Pennsylvania's Think Tanks and Civil Society Program.[30][31] In 2012, the same organization ranked MLI as one of the top three of the Best New Think Tanks worldwide.[32]: 87 


MLI contributors and staff have provided commentary for national and regional news media on a variety of national issues.[33] The institute's Op-Eds have appeared in Canadian national newspapers such as The Globe and Mail and National Post, as well as in the Vancouver Sun, Calgary Herald, Windsor Star, Moncton Times & Transcript, Halifax Chronicle-Herald. The institute has also been highlighted in Foreign Policy magazine,[34] The Wall Street Journal[35] and The Economist.[36] According to MLI, its articles and op-eds appear in the national and international media on average once a day.[37]


According to a report in The Guardian, a multi-year MLI campaign defended oil and gas development rights on Indigenous land. For several years, it helped discourage Canada's government from implementing a United Nations declaration on Indigenous peoples' rights to reject pipelines or drilling, until Parliament eventually passed a law in 2021. The Guardian said the MLI campaign was in partnership with the Atlas Network, a libertarian-conservative group based in the United States, but MLI disputes the relationship.[38][39] MLI said its experts support Indigenous energy rights but took issue with the proposed legislation.[39]

Political stance[edit]

The Economist described MLI in 2010 as non-partisan, as did a story in The Globe and Mail in 2024.[14][15] MLI was included in a 2012 Forbes article by former Atlas Network president Alejandro Chafuen describing the market-oriented think tank landscape in Canada.[9] MLI was described in 2012 as one of a new generation of similarly-minded think tanks to the Fraser Institute in a story published in the National Post.[40] The social democratic Broadbent Institute referred to the MacDonald-Laurier Institute as a "right-wing charity" in a 2018 article.[41] MLI is one of ten Canadian think tanks that belong to the Atlas Network, a conservative and libertarian group.[10][11][42][43] MLI says it is non-partisan.[13]


In April 2023, MLI's website was blocked in Russia, along with that of other Western think tanks including Britain's Chatham House and the Woodrow Wilson Center in the U.S.[17] Global News said MLI had been "a leading voice against the Russian war in Ukraine".[17] In August 2022 MLI was added to the Russian Ministry of Justice's list of "foreign and international non-governmental organizations whose activities are recognized as undesirable in Russia."[44][45][46][17]

Organisation[edit]

The Macdonald-Laurier Institute's Managing Director is Brian Lee Crowley.[47] [48] He has served as the Clifford Clark Visiting Economist at the Department of Finance,[49] and founded the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies.[50] MLI has a Board of Directors, an Advisory Council, and a Research Advisory Board.[51] MLI is a registered charity with the Canada Revenue Agency.[6]

The Macdonald–Laurier Institute

. ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer.

"Macdonald–Laurier Institute Internal Revenue Service filings"