Teacher Freedom Alliance is a nonprofit organization listed by ProPublica as Teacher Freedom Alliance Inc, EIN 33-1999114, Grapevine, Texas, ruling date 2024-12-01, NTEE R20, and latest profile tax period 2024-12-01. The current ProPublica payload lists assets, income, and revenue fields of $2,500,000, but includes no filing rows yet.
Teacher Freedom Alliance's public team page identifies the organization as a registered 501(c)(3) and repeats EIN 33-1999114. It states a mission to assist educators in developing "free, moral, and upright American citizens."
The Freedom Foundation's March 7, 2025 announcement says it launched Teacher Freedom Alliance as a new partner organization designed to offer educators an alternative to union membership. The release connects TFA to the Freedom Foundation's Teacher Freedom Summit and says the summit had brought together more than 500 educators from 35 states over the prior two years.
The current TFA leadership page lists:
CMD's March 13, 2025 reporting says the Freedom Foundation officially launched TFA after soft-launching it at prior Teacher Freedom Summits, and describes TFA as an anti-union network for teachers. Use CMD's strategic framing as attributed reporting.
Current sources support an indirect Bradley connection through Freedom Foundation. CMD reports that the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation contributed $3.2 million to Freedom Foundation from 2018-2023 and identifies Bradley as the largest known Freedom Foundation funder in CMD's analysis.
This pass does not establish a direct Bradley Foundation or Bradley Impact Fund grant to Teacher Freedom Alliance. The initial TFA funding source, including the source of the $2,500,000 ProPublica profile amount, remains unresolved until filings or grant records are available.
The Colorado Springs D11 strike article reports that Ryan Walters appeared in Colorado Springs during the D11 labor dispute as Teacher Freedom Alliance CEO. It also places Teacher Freedom Alliance in the same public event / protest context as Freedom Foundation figures around the D11 strike.
Use this as public-appearance and messaging-context evidence. It does not prove that TFA directed D11 board actions, funded Colorado local campaigns, or controlled local strike strategy.