Houston Chronicle Sunday

Lawmaker facing backlash over his right-wing views

- By Richard Read

SPOKANE VALLEY, Wash. — The mayor of this Spokane suburb recently told an audience of fellow conservati­ves that police should have shot Rodney King. He heard no objections.

Nor was there dissent when a popular pastor urged his congregant­s during a recent Sunday sermon to gird for war with an antiChrist­ian government. They applauded.

So it’s perhaps not surprising that Spokane Valley is at the heart of a district where voters keep reelecting Matt Shea, a state lawmaker who distribute­d a document last year telling Christians to “kill all males” if gay people and abortion advocates don’t yield to fundamenta­list religious law after the U.S. government collapses. The six-term Republican, who counts the unrepentan­t mayor and the doomsday pastor as close allies, wants eastern Washington to secede and form a 51st state called Liberty embodying his style of Christian values.

Shea commands more influence than his state legislativ­e role would suggest, speaking nationally and attracting wide attention in far-right and white supremacis­t circles. The militia proponent and participan­t in the so-called patriot movement describes the United States as a Christian nation under siege.

“The real threat that we face in this country is Islamists and Marxists and their sympathize­rs at the local level,” Shea told constituen­ts recently. “We need to reclaim our Christian moral foundation and not be ashamed of it.”

But Shea may be losing his grip in his district and in Spokane Valley, a city of almost 100,000 near the Idaho state line. In elections this month, he lost majority backing on Spokane Valley’s City Council, one of several local bodies that critics describe as having followed his direction and provided political support.

Shea faces other challenges. Washington House Republican­s have stripped him of a party leadership position and some campaign donors have abandoned him. A former FBI agent hired by the House is due to report Dec. 2 on a three-month investigat­ion to determine whether Shea incited political violence, a finding that could lead to his removal from office.

Online chat records obtained recently by the Guardian newspaper show Shea and other patriotmov­ement members discussing violence, conspiracy theories, surveillan­ce of adversarie­s and support for white nationalis­ts.

Shea, 45, is a squarejawe­d attorney and U.S. Army veteran who served in Bosnia and Iraq, receiving a Bronze Star. A graduate of Gonzaga University and its law school, he chairs the Coalition of Western States, an organizati­on that debuted in 2014 at Cliven Bundy’s Nevada ranch to support the Bundy family’s armed standoff against federal agents. Shea, who also supported the Bundy-led 2016 occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in

Oregon, founded a chapter of the anti-Muslim group ACT for America, considered a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Shea, who has been in office since 2008, hosts a “Patriot Radio” talk show on the American Christian Network but avoids speaking to reporters and addressing the general public in his district. He did not respond to repeated requests for an interview.

Local libertaria­ns and farright activists have also formed organizati­ons such as Northwest Grassroots, which holds monthly open meetings at a Spokane Valley restaurant. The organizati­on drew criticism last year for hosting James Allsup, a far-right provocateu­r whose views have been widely condemned as racist.

At the organizati­on’s most recent meeting, on Nov. 13, Rod Higgins, Spokane Valley’s 77-year-old mayor, addressed a few dozen people, lamenting voters’ defeat of two fellow City Council members also aligned with Shea. The mayor, who is white, asked whether his audience remembered Rodney King, the African American man severely beaten in 1991 by Los Angeles Police Department officers after a high-speed chase. Higgins said he was surprised the officers didn’t shoot King, because “it would have been justified,” given that he was “higher than a kite.”

Members of the audience cheered on the mayor, who stood by his statements, saying that he cited King’s beating to illustrate how circumstan­ces can be taken out of context.

During his talk, Higgins proceeded to castigate two men who defected from Shea’s political organizati­on and criticized another local man known for renouncing a white supremacis­t upbringing in Idaho.

The two defectors, Jay Pounder and Tanner Rowe, leaked a four-page manifesto last year titled “Biblical Basis for War,” in which Shea described God as a “warrior,” outlined strategies of a “Holy Army,” and advocated killing all males who did not accept biblical law and bans on abortion and same-sex marriage. Shea said the tract merely summarized a scholarly sermon on Old Testament warfare — an interpreta­tion disputed by theologian­s.

The evening before Higgins’ talk, the third man he would criticize — John Smith, a Shea critic who broke from a white supremacis­t past — received an award at Veradale United Church of Christ, a progressiv­e Christian church in Spokane Valley, for courage in exposing the “racist and extremist ideology” of Shea and the Marble religious community.

Accepting his award Nov. 12, Smith paraphrase­d an Old Testament verse, saying that a person who witnesses a wrongdoing and doesn’t speak out, shares it.

“What I would hope,” Smith said, “is that Matt Shea is driven to a point of personal conscience.”

 ?? Carolyn Cole / Tribune News Service ?? John Smith, right, receives an award for exposing the “racist and extremist ideology” of Matt Shea.
Carolyn Cole / Tribune News Service John Smith, right, receives an award for exposing the “racist and extremist ideology” of Matt Shea.
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