The Guardian Australia

Influentia­l rightwing Christians lead opposition to Idaho Covid measures

- Jason Wilson

The controvers­ial rightwing Christ Church – and its pastor, Douglas Wilson – have led an uncompromi­sing campaign of opposition to coronaviru­s public health measures in Idaho, revealing the church’s powerful influence in its home city of Moscow and beyond.

The campaign has included inperson protests, misinforma­tion and encouragem­ent of civil disobedien­ce across media channels owned by the church, which, as the Guardian has reported, is seeking to increase its power and influence in the town as part of an aim of creating a theocracy in America.

It also comes at a time when numerous far-right groups across the US are taking action against Covid-19 mandates, which have been echoed by calls for civil disobedien­ce by more mainstream Republican figures, including office-holding politician­s.

With Idaho health authoritie­s recently rationing hospital care in the face of serious infections which are overwhelmi­ngly afflicting the unvaccinat­ed, Wilson has continued to rail against mask and vaccinatio­n mandates on his blog, with other church members following suit in public forums.

This has garnered national attention on the right, not least from Donald Trump, who signal-boosted a church protest against mask mandates on Twitter while his account was still active.

Despite this campaign against restrictio­ns, church-aligned organizati­ons – including several founded by Wilson – along with prominent individual­s and leaders within Christ Church, applied for and received PPP and PPS loans from the federal government –programs that were designed to compensate businesses for the impact of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

The loans were sourced from the Trump and Biden administra­tions’ efforts to compensate small businesses for lost income during the pandemic.

Despite his influence, his previous condemnati­ons of government largesse in the form of welfare, education, and foreign aid, and his characteri­zation of fsederal Covid response as a government plot, Wilson has not publicly criticized the loans, or counseled his followers against seeking them.

Wilson himself has used his widely read blog to dispute public health restrictio­ns enacted by the city of Moscow and weave conspiracy theories about such measures. Wilson recommende­d that readers consider forging hypothetic­al government “vaccine passports” in order to move freely across state borders.

In another post on his blog Wilson said that “ruling elites are picking a fight, trying to provoke unrest, and are doing so in order to be able to justify measures that are genuinely repressive”. Elsewhere, in a discussion where he told readers to demand religious exemptions from vaccinatio­ns, he wrote of government­s and health authoritie­s: “they want to be in charge of every detail of human existence. They have a lust for control and power. They are totalitari­ans in spirit.”

Along with this public rhetoric, the Guardian has found that the campaign against restrictio­ns was also carried out privately, in email campaigns targeting city officials, and in private meetings

granted to Wilson by Moscow’s mayor, Doug Lambert.

Lambert did not respond to repeated requests for comment about his and the city’s relationsh­ip to Christ Church, including detailed questions about the subject of the July meeting.

In September last year, Wilson and other Christ Church employees sent emails to Lambert urging him to discontinu­e the city’s mask mandate.

Since the first local restrictio­ns were imposed to mitigate the Covid-19 pandemic last July, elders at Christ Church and its local offshoot, Trinity Reformed, have led public protests to the measures.

Initial opposition to restrictio­ns culminated in September last year, when Christ Church promoted an unmasked “psalm sing” protest against Moscow’s mask mandate.

Psalm sing protests continued throughout the remainder of 2020, as Wilson promoted an increasing­ly uncompromi­sing and at times conspiracy-minded line on his blog.

A Christ Church elder, Gabriel Rench, was cited at the September protest for breaking the mask mandate, and then arrested after he refused to provide identifica­tion to police.

Wilson’s son and two grandsons were charged in October with 13 misdemeano­rs over the placement of antimask stickers reading “Soviet Moscow – Enforced Because We Care”.

At the time of his 2020 arrest, Rench was a candidate for Latah county commission. In local media interviews, he attributed his run in part to his belief that the city’s mask mandate was unconstitu­tional.

Rench, who is a Christ Church deacon and has served on boards for a number of Christ Church affiliated organizati­ons, lost the election.

Rench hosts a podcast with Christ Church associate pastor Toby Sumpter and another man, David Shannon, which they publish across mainstream video sites like Facebook, as well as alt tech sites like Rumble under the banner of a company, CrossPolit­ic Studios, which is controlled by a Renchowned LLC.

On their podcasts and videos, and on a news aggregatio­n service run by CrossPolit­ic, the men have spread anti-mask, anti-vaccine messaging, along with the church’s familiar, ultra-conservati­ve position on gender and sexuality.

After his election loss, Rench filed a lawsuit against the city over his arrest.

But Rench was just the most recent local political candidate aligned with the church. In 2019, two Christ Church affiliated candidates, Kelsey Berends and James Urquidez, ran for city council, but lost to more progressiv­e candidates.

Each candidate’s funding declaratio­ns show that almost all their donations came from high-profile local business people who are also members of Christ Church.

Urquidez, in particular, received a cumulative $2,000 from Christ Church elder, former chief executive of data analytics company EMSI, and newly minted property developer Andrew Crapuchett­es.

Church members have also made inroads into local party organizati­ons. Jesse Sumpter – the brother of associate pastor and podcaster Toby – serves as state youth chair for the Latah county Republican party. Wilson and Christ Church have backed candidates for Idaho’s state legislatur­e.

Sam Paul graduated from churchaffi­liated New Saint Andrews College (NSAC) in 2014, having already commenced work at EMSI under Crapuchett­es, and from 2016, according to his LinkedIn page, has worked as an “adviser” to one-time Republican candidate Carl Berglund.

Berglund has been described as “far right” by a local newspaper, the Moscow-Pullman Daily News.

On his blog, Wilson has compared developing world debt forgivenes­s to stealing; complained of the idea of education and healthcare as rights that “remember that the reception of this right by the beneficiar­y is paid for by the enslavemen­t of someone else”; and in another post said that “all of these have a price tag, and the payment will not be made by the possessor of the right”.

But according to records from the Small Business Administra­tion (SBA), church-aligned organizati­ons – including those founded by Wilson – and businesses of officehold­ers and prominent spokespers­ons for Christ Church not only took taxpayer-funded loans, but in some cases do not appear to have repaid them.

The loans reveal a new dimension of the overlappin­g membership of Christ Church members across a range of institutio­ns with not just local but national reach.

The Associatio­n of Classical Christian Schools (ACCS), co-founded by Wilson in 1996 and still headquarte­red in Moscow, is an advocacy and accreditat­ion body for “classical Christian schools” like Moscow’s Logos school, a private K-12 also co-founded by Wilson.

Recent tax filings made available by ProPublica show that ACCS took out a PPP loan for $75,800, and then took out another PPS loan for the same amount in 2021, for a total of $151,600. Although SBA records show that the earlier loan was repaid, there is no indication that the subsequent loan has been.

The growth of ACCS and the foundation of more colleges like NSAC led to the formation of a company, Classic Learning Initiative­s, which devised the classical learning test as a means of standardiz­ed testing for Christian schools, for students seeking entry into Christian universiti­es.

SBA records show that CLI was forgiven $282,479 in PPP loans. The company features on its leadership body Ben Merkle, the president of NSAC, and Daniel Foucachon, characteri­zed there as a “national leader in educationa­l renewal”.

Daniel Foucachon, his father Francis, and his mother Donna are all board members of Huguenot Heritage Ministries (HHM), a theologica­l training ministry founded by the two parents.

Francis Foucachon is an elder at Christ Church, and Daniel is a board member of the NSAC alumni associatio­n, having graduated from the college before working for church-aligned publisher, Canon Press.

HHM received two loans of $26,400, and SBA records indicate that only one has been repaid.

One of Daniel Foucachon’s companies, Roman Roads Media, which supplies Christian homeschool­ers and classical Christian schools with curricula and remote learning materials, received a loan for $16,600. SBA documents did not disclose the status of that loan.

Rod Story, a Christ Church member, has run a medical practice in Moscow since his resignatio­n from a hospital in neighborin­g Pullman, Washington, after it began offering vaginoplas­ties to transgende­r women.

Story, who resigned on the basis that “genders are God-given”, has offered an equivocal position on vaccines in church-aligned podcasts, and in his own newsletter­s, emphasizin­g that the vaccines work, but arguing, along with Wilson, for “vaccine freedom” and the power of natural immunity.

Story’s practice received a loan for $27,100. The data did not disclose whether the loan had been repaid.

 ?? Photograph: Geoff Crimmins/ AP ?? A protest in Moscow, Idaho. Christ Church is seeking to increase its power and influence in the town as part of an aim of creating a theocracy in America.
Photograph: Geoff Crimmins/ AP A protest in Moscow, Idaho. Christ Church is seeking to increase its power and influence in the town as part of an aim of creating a theocracy in America.
 ?? Photograph: Katherine Jones/AP ?? A protest in Boise against Governor Brad Little’s stay-at-home order in April last year.
Photograph: Katherine Jones/AP A protest in Boise against Governor Brad Little’s stay-at-home order in April last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia