Patrick T. Brown

Fellow

Patrick T. Brown is a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, where his work with the Life and Family Initiative focuses on developing a robust pro-family economic agenda and supporting families as the cornerstone of a healthy and flourishing society.

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Patrick T. Brown is a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, where his work focuses on developing a robust pro-family economic agenda and supporting families as the cornerstone of a healthy and flourishing society.

His writing has been published in The New York Times, National Review, Politico, The Washington Post, and USA Today, and he has spoken on college campuses and Capitol Hill on topics from welfare reform to child-care and education policy.

He has published reports on paid leave and family policy with the Institute for Family Studies, and edited an essay series featuring working-class voices for American Compass. He is an advisory board member of Humanity Forward and the Center on Child and Family Policy and a contributing editor to Public Discourse.

Prior to joining EPPC, Patrick served as a senior policy advisor to Congress’ Joint Economic Committee. There, he helped lead research about how to make it more affordable to raise a family and more effectively invest in youth and young adults. He also previously worked a government-relations staffer for Catholic Charities USA.

Patrick graduated from the University of Notre Dame with a degree in political science and economics. He also holds a Master’s in Public Affairs from Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. He and his wife Jessica have four young children and live in Columbia, S.C.

 

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Biden’s Reconciliation Plan Would Expand Marriage Penalties. That’s Not Build Back Better.

Patrick T. Brown

Not only do marriage penalties leave families economically worse off, they also undermine marriage, an essential institution in a functioning society.

Articles

USA Today / October 29, 2021

INTERVIEW: Patrick T. Brown on Working-Class Families and the Child Tax Credit

Patrick T. Brown

EPPC Fellow Patrick T. Brown talks with Spotlight on Poverty about the congressional debate over child tax credits and what working-class families think about proposed federal aid.

Articles

Spotlight on Poverty / October 27, 2021

Gimme Shelter

Patrick T. Brown

David Wessel’s book Only the Rich Can Play offers an uncomfortable reminder that no matter how much you may appreciate an idea’s intellectual lineage or conceptual clarity, no plan survives first contact with the enemy.

Articles

American Compass / October 21, 2021

Why Working-Class Parents Don’t Buy What D.C. Is Selling

Patrick T. Brown

If politicians want expanded child benefits to stick, they need to listen to the families that will benefit most.

Articles

The New York Times / September 14, 2021

Early Childhood Districts: A Capita Symposium

Patrick T. Brown

It is difficult to look at the existing public education system and recommend it as a model for ensuring high-quality child care for newborns, toddlers, and preschoolers.

Articles

Capita / September 8, 2021

Working Americans Are Speaking. Are Politicians Listening?

Patrick T. Brown

For a “populist” agenda to be more than a noisy veneer on pre-existing preferences, partisans of the right and left need to recognize the distance between their favored narratives and the ones that keep working-class Americans up at night.

Articles

Newsweek / August 23, 2021

More Beautiful Backyards

Patrick T. Brown

To be successful, the pro-housing movement must respect the desire of homeowners to influence the look and feel of their neighborhood. Showing such flexibility will help smooth the path for more housing, in more styles, and in more neighborhoods, across the United States.

Articles

City Journal / August 12, 2021

Where School Choice Legislation Falls Short

Patrick T. Brown

A conservative educational agenda needs to move beyond choice alone and toward a system of educational pluralism in which government dollars are used to support a multiplicity of schooling options.

Articles

Washington Examiner / August 6, 2021

Where Should New Parents Settle Post-COVID?

Patrick T. Brown

As the ripple effects from COVID start to fade, making more communities attractive to couples and families who want to move should become a priority of any pro-family policy agenda.

Articles

Institute for Family Studies / August 5, 2021

How Conservatives Could Solve the Child Care Crunch

Patrick T. Brown

If conservatives are serious about opposing progressives’ prescriptions for big-government solutions to child care affordability, they need to come up with proactive ideas beyond just tax credits.

Articles

Newsweek / July 12, 2021

The Communitarian Case for a Universal Child Benefit

Patrick T. Brown

A conservative family policy should be about supporting families as the core building block of a flourishing society — and recognizing the work parents put into rearing the next generation.

Articles

Real Clear Policy / June 18, 2021

Child Care Pluralism: Supporting Working Families in Their Full Diversity

Patrick T. Brown

Expanding the array of options available to American families, whether it be care by a relative or parent, or a daycare or child care center, should be a prime focus of public policy.

Articles

Family Matters from Fellow Patrick T. Brown of the Life and Family Initiative is a weekly update on the policies and ideas that can better support parents and strengthen families as the essential building block of a healthy society.