May 29, 2020 "
Information
Clearing House"
-
“The
Covid virus
has been a gift from
God,” began Ken Eldred.
“The kingdom of God
advances through a
series of glorious
victories, cleverly
disguised as disasters.”
In response to the
coronavirus pandemic,
Eldred noted, millions
of Americans are turning
to Christ, Walmart is
selling out of Bibles,
and online church
broadcasts have hit
record numbers.
But while religiosity
was growing, there have
been setbacks from the
disease outbreak. “Satan
has been busy too,”
Eldred, a major donor to
evangelical and
Republican causes,
explained. “The virus
has messed up many of
our plans involving our
in-person meetings with
voters.”
And the
rise of mail-in ballots,
Eldred added, would
undercut voter
identification laws,
which have been a pillar
of GOP election
strategy. “The children
of the darkness put
early voting into this
CARES package,” he
grumbled, a reference to
the $400 million for
election assistance
programs to states
included in the $2.2
trillion coronavirus
relief bill.
Following a brief prayer
led by Eldred, in
which he declared that
“we have now turned the
corner on the virus” and
asked God for an end to
coronavirus deaths, the
business of the call got
started: How Christian
voters can be a force to
reelect Donald Trump.
The call, held in
mid-April, one in a
series of meetings
sponsored by United in
Purpose, a low-key group
that has quietly become
a preeminent venue for
leaders on the religious
right to convene. UIP
was crucial in
connecting Trump to
evangelical leaders in
2016, and it promises to
be one of the most vital
weapons in Trump’s
reelection arsenal this
year.
At first, the effort may
seem like a throwback.
Participants in the
group include
televangelist preachers
and anti-gay activists.
David Barton, a
historian that serves on
the board of UIP, sells
box sets
of DVDs arguing that
America was founded as a
fundamentalist Christian
nation with no
separation of church and
state.
But the group, whose
supporters include major
donors to conservative
causes, pastors, and
political operatives
with decades of winning
elections, is serious
about serving as the tip
of the spear to maintain
control of the White
House. UIP’s 2020
election plan — which it
calls “Ziklag,” a town
referenced in the Bible
— is a multipronged
effort to connect Trump
with evangelical leaders
and increase support
among minority voters
through appeals to
faith-based messages and
church outreach.