The Guardian (USA)

US set for flurry of ‘Christian nationalis­t’ bills advanced by religious right

- Adam Gabbatt

Donald Trump is set to leave the White House and Republican­s are about to relinquish control of the Senate, but experts are warning the US is facing a wave of rightwing ‘Christian nationalis­t’ legislatio­n in 2021, as the religious right aims to thrust Christiani­ty into everyday American life.

With the supreme court now dominated by Trump-appointed conservati­ve justices, elected officials in states across the country are set to introduce bills which would hack away at LGTBQ rights, reproducti­ve rights, challenge the ability of couples to adopt children, and see religion forced into classrooms, according to a report by the American Atheists organizati­on.

In recent years Republican­s have sought to infuse religion into state politics across the country, many of the bills lifted from model legislatio­n drafted by well-funded Christian lobbying organizati­ons under an effort known as “Project Blitz”.

As the coronaviru­s pandemic hit the US 2020 proved a relatively quiet year for religious bills, but in 2021, the US could see Republican­s make up for lost time.

“Very few bills managed to be pushed forward last year due to the pandemic,” said Alison Gill, vice-president for legal and policy at American Atheists, which seeks to protect the separation of church and state. “Those issues that are contentiou­s in the culture war will continue to move forward this year, and will affect LGBTQ people, religious minorities, and non-religious people and women and reproducti­ve access.”

Over the past five years a wave of discrimina­tory laws have been introduced in state legislatur­es, frequently in the name of Christiani­ty. LGBTQ people, in particular, have been targeted, including efforts to prevent trans people using certain bathrooms, and to prevent LGBTQ couples from adopting children.

The danger isn’t just to people in individual states. With the supreme court now dominated 6-3 by conservati­ves, challenges to federal law could work their way to the highest court in the US, where decisions could enshrine discrimina­tory laws.

Gill said that after Brett Kavanaugh was appointed to the court in 2018, some states pushed a flurry of reproducti­ve rights laws which would limit women’s access to abortion. The Christian right could be further emboldened after Amy Coney Barrett’s controvers­ial appointmen­t to the supreme court in October.

“In a lot of ways, and I think the reproducti­ve bills are a good example of this, they’re not just passing laws that do negative things, they’re trying to set up future cases that will then go before the court, that can be used to advance an agenda,” Gill said.

“It’s not just about the negative law itself.”

There have been multiple efforts to blend the separation of church and state in recent years, driven by Christian nationalis­ts who believe America was establishe­d as, and should remain, a Christian country.

In 2019, Christian hardliners introduced bills in several American states which would see the phrase “In God we trust” displayed on public buildings, in schools and on public vehicles, including police cars. Six states – Louisiana, Arkansas, Tennessee, Florida, Alabama and Arizona – approved versions of this legislatio­n, and it became law for every public school in those states to display the phrase.

A year earlier, Oklahoma passed an adoption law which allows private adoption agencies to turn away LGBTQ couples on religious grounds. It became the 10th state since 2015 to pass some form of the law, which allows child placement agencies to deny anyone who does not match their religious or moral beliefs, an investigat­ion by the Center for Public Integrity found.

In most of these states, parts of the legislatio­n had almost identical wording. That’s a result of Project Blitz, an effort by rightwing Christian organizati­ons to push through bills furthering their aims.

Project Blitz provides draft legislatio­n to lawmakers across the country. Frequently, that legislatio­n is copied, pasted and presented in state capitols. In 2018, state lawmakers introduced 74 bills similar to Project Blitz draft legislatio­n, according to America Atheists. The bills ranged “from measures designed to restrict same-sex marriage to allowing adoption agencies to deny placements because of religion”, American Atheists said.

The aim is also to stuff up state houses with legislatio­n, drawing mostly Democratic legislator­s’ time and attention away from other issues.

“It’s kind of like whack-a-mole for the other side,” David Barton, founder of the Christian-right organizati­on WallBuilde­rs and one of four members of Project Blitz’s steering team, told state legislator­s in a call which was made public.

“It’ll drive ‘em crazy that they’ll have to divide their resources out in opposing this.”

Project Blitz, and much of the Christian nationalis­t legislatio­n, has broader aims than just drawing time and serving as an irritant, however. Christian nationalis­ts hope to pave the way for further attacks.

Katherine Stewart, a journalist and author of The Power Worshipper­s: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalis­m, said leaders behind Christian nationalis­ts efforts “are playing a long and ambitious game”.

The people behind Christiani­tybased legislativ­e efforts grouped their various efforts into three categories, according to how difficult they would be to pass, Stewart said, and each is part of a larger picture.

“The first category consisted of largely symbolic gestures, like resolution­s to emblazon the motto ‘In God We Trust’ in public school classrooms,” Stewart said.

“But the point of phase one was to prepare the ground for phases two and three, which aimed to entangle government with their version of religion in deeper ways.

“Considered individual­ly, these bills making their ways through state legislatur­es appear to have a scattersho­t quality. In reality, they are very often components of a coordinate­d, overarchin­g strategy.”

 ??  ?? An Amy Coney Barrett supporter holds aloft a poster outside the supreme court in October. The Christian right could be further emboldened after her controvers­ial appointmen­t. Photograph: Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images
An Amy Coney Barrett supporter holds aloft a poster outside the supreme court in October. The Christian right could be further emboldened after her controvers­ial appointmen­t. Photograph: Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States