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Coming For You Too?

Christians executed other Christians in colonial Salem

T.H. Matteson, Examination of a Witch, 1853 Public domain via Wikimedia Commons.

If you missed Tuesday’s reporting by Politico’s Alexander Ward and Heidi Przybla on plans to enact a Christian nationalist agenda in a second Trump term, do have a look. Spearheading the effort is Russell Vought, Trump’s former director of the Office of Management and Budget, now “president of The Center for Renewing America think tank, a leading group in a conservative consortium preparing for a second Trump term.” If you thought overturning Roe would turn the U.S. into the Republic of Gilead, that assessment was perhaps not alarming enough:

One document drafted by CRA staff and fellows includes a list of top priorities for CRA in a second Trump term. “Christian nationalism” is one of the bullet points. Others include invoking the Insurrection Act on Day One to quash protests and refusing to spend authorized congressional funds on unwanted projects, a practice banned by lawmakers in the Nixon era.

CRA’s work fits into a broader effort by conservative, MAGA-leaning organizations to influence a future Trump White House. Two people familiar with the plans, who were granted anonymity to discuss internal matters, said that Vought hopes his proximity and regular contact with the former president — he and Trump speak at least once a month, according to one of the people — will elevate Christian nationalism as a focal point in a second Trump term.

The documents obtained by POLITICO do not outline specific Christian nationalist policies. But Vought has promoted a restrictionist immigration agenda, saying a person’s background doesn’t define who can enter the U.S., but rather, citing Biblical teachings, whether that person “accept[ed] Israel’s God, laws and understanding of history.”

Vought has a close affiliation with Christian nationalist William Wolfe, a former Trump administration official who has advocated for overturning same-sex marriage, ending abortion and reducing access to contraceptives.

Vought, who declined to comment, is advising Project 2025, a governing agenda that would usher in one of the most conservative executive branches in modern American history. The effort is made up of a constellation of conservative groups run by Trump allies who’ve constructed a detailed plan to dismantle or overhaul key agencies in a second term. Among other principles, the project’s “Mandate for Leadership” states that “freedom is defined by God, not man.”

Dan Pfeiffer warns that based on statements from Trump advisers, such an agenda might include:

  • A national abortion ban;
  • Using FDA authority to ban or greatly restrict access to abortion medication (a defacto abortion ban);
  • Undermining marriage equality;
  • Attacking the rights and freedoms of trans people;
  • Ending no-fault divorce;
  • Invoking the Insurrection Act to stop protests;
  • Making it harder to access contraception;
  • Ending surrogacy; and
  • Getting rid of sex education in schools.

Pfeiffer writes:

This is not theoretical. All across the country, Republican extremists are implementing policies to further involve the government in people’s private decisions. Republicans want to regulate what you read, who you marry, how you procreate, and your medical decisions. In Alabama, the State Supreme Court just ruled that frozen embryos are people which could end access to in vitro fertilization (IVF). There is no doubt that a Trump Administration would argue against IVF in this case.

There are two things we know about Trump. One, he is not a details guy. He pays little attention to what his government does. The Christian Nationalist hacks that he places in these government jobs will have the freedom to run amok. Two, given a choice between appealing to his MAGA base or the broader electorate, Trump will choose the base every day and twice on Sunday.

We’ve warned here for years about the New Apostolic Reformation and Seven Mountains Domionionism that are apparently too in the weeds for Politico to mention. These tales of Christian nationalism are scary and meant to be. They are written to alert non-believers, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, and non-conforming others that Christian nationalists mean to render them more marginalized than they are now. In Jesus’ name, of course.

What Pfeiffer and others miss is that Christians are no more a monolithic block than any other subset on the American demographic landscape. Christianity may represent the predominant faith in the U.S., but the whacked-out brand Christian nationalists advocate, noisy as it is, hardly represents the Christian mainstream. So it’s not just non-Christians who need worry that Christian nationalists might gain control of the levers of power. Christian non-nationalists should worry.

MAGA Republicans may be tribal, but the American Taliban is even less willing to tolerate deviations from the decidedly un-Jesusy views that the god whispering inside their heads finds acceptable. God help you, ordinary Lutherans, Episcopalians, Methodists, etc. You are not exempt. Your freedom of religion is not guaranteed.

Puritans executed other Christians in colonial Salem. Christian nationalists in a second Trump term may say, Hold my beer.

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