It looks like Time’s Up is finally calling #timesup on itself.

Time’s Up formed in 2018 amidst Harvey Weinstein’s mounting sexual assault allegations and rising public outcry against Hollywood’s established power dynamics. As a non-profit fundraiser, Time’s Up successfully positioned itself as a necessary united front, raising $22M in its first 10 months from wealthy benefactors like Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, Meryl Streep, Shonda Rhimes, and CAA. The money raised by Time’s Up went to establishing the Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund (TULDF), which provides legal support and resources to victims of gender-related crimes and systemic injustices, and is administered externally by the National Women’s Law Center in Washington, D.C.

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The TULDF has effectively connected more than 6,000 sexual harassment victims to lawyers, covered legal fees for 330 court cases, providing publicity support for 130 cases – and they are still actively taking new cases.

Time’s Up’s leadership team, however, is finally throwing in the towel after being caught with a hamper full of its own dirty laundry two years ago. In August 2021, a State Attorney General report revealed that Time’s Up leaders were offering legal counsel to Governor Andrew Cuomo while he was being accused of sexual harassment, which led to the resignations of CEO Tina Tchen and board chair Roberta Kaplan.

While the organization has experienced a high level of CEO turnover, the remaining leadership team, actress Ashley Judd, attorney Nina Shaw, and financial executive Gabrielle Sulzberger, have formally declared their resignations, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The remaining $1.7 million in funds will be disbursed to the TULDF when the group dissolves at the end of the month.

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Since its glamorous red carpet unveiling during the 2018 Golden Globes, the organization has come under fire for committing the exact sort of misdemeanors it was supposedly fighting against.

“Outside of pins being adorned to very fancy dresses on the red carpet, what came out of that organization?” wrote activist and sexual assault survivor Alison Turkos in an open letter to the Time’s Up board, sent collectively by 151 victims and former staff members.

Her letter continues:

“When you do survivor-based work in the entertainment world, you’re going to be talking about harm and trauma that your friends caused, you have to be able to look someone in the eye who maybe wrote you a check and say, ‘We have to have a hard conversation.’ Instead, money and power took over everything, and their mission drifted into seeing how many powerful people they could get at a lunch table.”