Call & Times

Paula White, President Trump’s key spiritual adviser, reportedly will join the White House

- By SARAH BAILEY

Florida televangel­ist Paula White, who has served as a kind of spiritual adviser to President Donald Trump, will join his administra­tion in an official capacity, according to a senior administra­tion official and another person familiar with the move. White, who already helps to coordinate Trump’s evangelica­l outreach to key leaders, will be a religious adviser in the Office of Public Liaison, the part of the White House overseeing outreach to groups seen as part of Trump’s base.

The move appears to formalize a relationsh­ip that has been years in the making, going back nearly two decades when White and Trump first met.

White was one of six clergy who prayed at Trump’s inaugurati­on, and other evangelica­l advisers say she speaks with Trump regularly. She is known as one of the most prominent televangel­ists who teach a prosperity gospel, that God will reward believers with wealth and health, a teaching that many Christian believe is heretical.

Trump’s 2016 campaign had an advisory council of mostly white evangelica­l leaders during his campaign, many of whom have continued to serve as unofficial advisers. Some, including Southern Baptist pastors, recently promoted White’s new book.

Johnnie Moore, an informal leader of Trump’s evangelica­l advisory board, of which White is often the convener, said that the Florida-based megachurch pastor and author recently played a significan­t role in helping to push criminal justice reform policies forward. “She has been a liaison to all kinds of Christians, Christians who were critical of her and impolite before they met her,” he said.

White did not immediatel­y return a phone call or text message from The Washington Post on Friday. A White House spokesman did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. The change was first reported Friday by the New York Times. It is unclear whether White will be paid in her new role. Past presidents, including Barack Obama and George W. Bush, set up formal councils on faith-based and community partnershi­ps, but Trump has not made that same faith-based council structure a key priority in his administra­tion.

Instead, Trump’s evangelica­l advisory board is an informal gathering of religious leaders who supported the president during his campaign and continue to receive invitation­s to the White House regularly. After providing their support early on, the group has been rewarded with invitation­s to dinners and consultati­ons.

The unofficial advisers have often been criticized even among evangelica­ls for their uncritical admiration of the Trump administra­tion. Some have pointed to past examples for how evangelica­ls have been used for political gain. One famous evangelica­l, the late Chuck Colson of the Nixon administra­tion, once led the Office of Public Liaison as director. But after he spent time in prison, he recalled how Nixon would use evangelica­ls for their own purposes.

“Sure, we used the prayer breakfasts and church services and all that for political ends,” Colson later said, according to historian Kevin Kruse. “One of my jobs in the White House was to romance religious leaders. We would bring them into the White House, and they would be dazzled by the aura of the Oval Office, and I found them to be about the most pliable of any of the special interest groups that we worked with.”

Trump has pleased many evangelica­l leaders with his nomination of Supreme Court justices, his anti-abortion policies and his inclusion of evangelica­ls in his own administra­tion, such as Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

A group of leaders met with Trump earlier this week and prayed for him. Evangelica­l leaders who were there included James Dobson, Ralph Reed and Tony Perkins, and White was seated at Trump’s right hand.

Under President George W. Bush, the idea of a faith-based office was formed and raised questions over the relationsh­ip between church and state. In 2009, Obama establishe­d an Advisory Council on FaithBased and Neighborho­od Partnershi­ps, which included 60 representa­tives from a variety of faiths, including evangelica­l, Catholic, Buddhist, Mormon, Jewish and Muslim. Last year, Trump announced his version of the White House faith-based office called the “White House Faith and Opportunit­y Initiative.” Rather than inviting religious leaders to the White House through an establishe­d council, Trump’s liaison office has extended invitation­s to select leaders.

 ?? Washington Post photo by Sarah L. Voisin ?? Paula White is a Florida televangel­ist who has been serving as Trump’s personal pastor.
Washington Post photo by Sarah L. Voisin Paula White is a Florida televangel­ist who has been serving as Trump’s personal pastor.

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