Australians must not ignore the Religious right’s global warnings 2.0

This essay was first published at the AIMN in September 2022. Since then the world has changed dramatically. Much of that change has been strategically orchestrated by networks of operations, with substantial funding from fossil fuel interests.

Now National Conservative (NatCon) politics has come from the background to the White House. This project can be understood as religio-ethnonationalism. The drafters wanted to retrieve “nationalism” from the taint of Hitler (and the “socialism” his movement used in its title) to the more comforting label of “conservatism.” The drafters of the 2019 NatCon Statement were a mix of Christian Nationalist and Israeli Jewish Nationalists. The desired population in their fascistic politics was to be known by its faith identification rather than its race. Of course, race is implicit in both these ethnostate movements.

It is a project brimful of bigotry, against Muslims and against anyone not saving sexual activity for reproductive purposes in cishet sacred marriage. That is partly because such activity is sinful, and partly because “race suicide” is one of their “moral” panics: any impediment to (White) breeding is an existential threat.

NatCon is the “intellectual” project of the New Right. Post-liberal Right “intellectuals” are central to the project. Their disillusionment with the messiness of pluralist societies has resulted in them abandoning the democratic experiment. If they cannot gather a majority to vote for them, then voting can only be done in pantomime while the Right restores virtue and order by fiat.

NatCon involves an integration of networks. Rupert Murdoch’s media behemoth is involved through the presence of culture warrior Miranda Devine as a signatory to the Statement, noted as employed by Murdoch’s NY Post. She also speaks at Christian Nationalist events in Australia. Murdoch can be viewed as an interlinked function of the Atlas Network and NatCon ideology. His platforms, particularly The Australian, broadcast NatCon-message op/eds constantly.

NatCon incorporates many actors from the Atlas Network. That body has always had a stream of thought along a spectrum from Christian Libertarianism to paleoconservatism. The former actively saw business and Christianity as natural partners in a more intellectual designation. (A natural bond for this Cold War project, since communists were against property and the free market, but also atheist.) The latter deployed “virtue” more cynically. The Acton Institute remains a relatively dignified Atlas Network partner, for example, dedicated to imposing Christianity into the Atlas mission. This essay sets out a debate between two Atlas junktanks on the matter. Other partners, most notably the Claremont Institute, have gone down the White Supremacist rabbit hole. It has been described as a “racist fever swamp,” providing the “intellectual” justification for Trump’s insurrection, allied with a radical right fraternal order, and giving fellowships to conspiracist propagandists such as Jack Posobiec. Posobiec published Unhumans about how the “woke” “left” needs to be eliminated. Posobiec believes, as one reviewer summarised, “everyone to the left of Herbert Hoover is a communist” but also “‘unhuman,’ not qualifying as a human being at all.”

Also firmly interconnected with NatCon is the Council for National Policy (CNP). This body, founded in 1981 alongside Atlas and sharing many partner organisations with Atlas, is overtly theocratic. See the Bad Faith documentary for primary source evidence and a compelling series of revelations.

Both Atlas and the CNP partners are present in substantial numbers in the Advisory Board for Project 2025. The Heritage Foundation, founded in 1973 and from which Project 2025 emerged as the latest iteration of its Mandate for Leadership, was a seminal partner for both Atlas and CNP. The Mandate, which began as the playbook to carry out Reagan’s economic revolution in 1980, is now part Charles Koch’s ultra libertarian wishlist and part Handmaid’s Tale social dystopia. The more overt interconnection of Atlas junktanks with the Christofascist CNP in Project 2025 and NatCon is a notable development.

NatCon and Atlas are both intertwined with Viktor Orbán’s thinktank space that promotes Christian Nationalist and Western chauvinist missions. Both are interlinked with organisations such as the now-global Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) and the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) That latter may be the British Commonwealth offshoot of NatCon: there is considerable overlap in the operations.

The raft of Executive Orders issued by the team of operators around Trump in his first days in office reveal the degree to which this kind of coercive brand of Christianity is being deployed against groups the radicalised Right targets. Trans people have been repeatedly targeted with even trans-supportive states choosing to stop issuing puberty preventing medication to up to 19 year olds, despite the fact that these medications are essential to wellbeing and well-tolerated. Intersex people, a literal biological fact from birth, are being erased as existing. And that is the first fortnight alone. Trump’s ridiculous order dictating that sex/gender is assigned at conception functions to support foetal personhood which will lead to more women having miscarriages being charged with murder. Trump’s order rolling back protection from discrimination for LGBTQIA people will mean that it is easier to discriminate against lesbians, gay and bisexual people as well as trans people. The degree to which cishet women and Queer people will be endangered by such measures, with more to come, can be seen in Republican dominated states where Project 2025 is already functioning. Obstetricians are leaving the states, and deaths related to pregnancies are prevented from being reported.

The attack on DEI (Diversity Equity and Inclusion programs) is partly driven by White grievance and bigotry and partly by a long history of White supremacy in Evangelical churches. They determine a moral harm in White men being subject to bosses who are neither White nor men.

One of the most crucial actors in Project 2025’s Christofascist team is Russell Vought. He admitted the goals and strategies to British undercover journalists. He is yet to be confirmed as head of the Office of Budget Management – controlling massive spending decisions – but is already demanding government officials speak to him if they do not agree with the funding freeze the White House is still attempting. Healthcare spending is a critical aspect of this freeze: know these “Christians” by their acts.

These decisions are unpopular and minoritarian. The ideological positions they promote have belonged to roughly 30% of the US population, and the minority would be smaller if the Religious Right had not spent the last 50 years using concerted disinformation to drive public opinion away from leaving fellow citizens to their private lives. The Christian Nationalist project does not care about the people who adhere to other denominations, faiths or no faith. They fervently believe that they alone understand what is moral and insist on their duty to impose that morality on the nation. In fact, the donors, junktanks and churches associated are funding imposing it on the world, not just the USA. This European Parliament study outlines foreign money supporting anti-gender fascistic politics in Europe.

Australians cannot treat this as an American problem. Our own radicalising Right – politicians and donors alike – has shown its slavish admiration for Trump’s style of politics. The potential for minoritarian government exists here, but the threat here does not lie in voter suppression. Instead it lies in radical Right factions besieging our “conservative” branches and, anecdotally, planning to infiltrate all political campaigns.

Both micro church, high control organisations – more cult than church – and the traditional denominations continue to have the intention to colonise political parties and shift the policy focus towards’ those churches’ ultra-conservative or radical goals, despite the will of the majority.

The Pentecostal micro churches seem, anecdotally, to be very focussed on recruiting the conspiracy and “freedom” movement sphere, known in Australia as “cookers,” to help generate a demographic impact. Cookers are showing themselves to be susceptible to deploying Christian identity rhetoric to aggrandise their conspiracy beliefs and bigotries. The importance of the worst of the covid era cannot be overstated in the changes taking place. QAnon conspiracies were an important link between these groups, and the beliefs associated with that conspiracy are now diffused through both movements. The compulsion to believe in opposition to empirical evidence unite them.

Strategists on the western Right appear to be pushing towards marking out a battle between a religious Right faction demarcated by the trope rather than the faith of “Christian” against an amorphous threat they demarcate as “woke.”

This has the benefit of allowing the “enemy” to shift to mean what they want it to mean: during covid, health policy including mask-wearing could be denoted as “woke.” The Christian signifier means that the movement can load the weight of “sin” onto the identities and equal rights important to pluralist societies, so that “purple-haired feminists” are not just repulsive but actually sinful. Bigotries become justifiable, according to this paradigm, if demarcated as a religious intolerance.

It is also a strategy to build electoral success. It aims to unite tradition conservative and labour voters who are socially reactionary with the Religious right of various denominations, with cookers, with bigots, with the manosphere podcast and techfascist scene. The goal is concealing these factions’ differences beneath a loathing of a confected notion of “wokeness,” to assist regaining power.

The association of climate science and action with “woke” is a substantial motivator for fossil fuel donations that are crucial to the impact of this movement. Donors such as Charles Koch are utterly essential to the project. For some donors, the Christian Nationalism is a personal commitment; for others it is a handy tool to crush impediments to profit.

The Christofascism that feeds into the techfascist movement is also critical. Investigators such as Jenny Cohn continue to provide evidence revealing the cooperation between the extreme Religous Right and the techbros who control so much current communication.

Americans are in serious trouble. Those of us outside America need to see the scope of the crisis as an international one. We need our compatriots to understand what voting “conservative” means in 2025.

See how much the situation has changed since 2022:

Australians have begun to see the new face of extreme religion in our “conservative” politics. The international influences are varied and interconnected. These radical forces are not a private feature in politicians’ lives, but threaten the freedoms we value. It is only through better understanding the global impacts that we can protect our democracy.

There was jubilation around Australia at the defeat of the Morrison government in May. Some rejoiced at ousting the man himself. For others the relief was inspired by the majority uniting against a government signifying climate inaction or corruption or misogyny. Scott Morrison’s insertion of American-style religion into the Australian civic space contributed to his loss. If Australians had understood how alien this ideology is, it would have been much more central. The defeat of Morrison, however, is not the end of that religious intrusion into Australian “conservative” politics; it is part of the global phenomenon of reactionary Religious Right authoritarianism. In the month Morrison left the Lodge, the American majority was reeling at the implications of the leaked Supreme Court decision on Roe v Wade. In Europe, Queer Ukrainians were finding themselves pincered between the deep sexual stigma that pervades the culture of the invading Russians as well as the countries like Poland and Hungary where many are finding refuge. The Australian Religious Right draws on the power of the global movement’s successes like the Dobbs. decision. It becomes more dangerous in its merging with secular bigotries and reactionary forces. Reflecting global political trends, it works not for “the next election, but the next generation.” It, and the culture wars that harness its votes, will not be backbenched with Morrison.

It is not only the faith-driven that make Religious Right politics a threat. These forces are bolstered by marriages of convenience between apparently incompatible forces. Secular libertarian members of the Republican Party embrace social conservatism and even perform devotion to faith to draw in the energised Religious Right voting bloc. British Tories are a dominant model for the Australian secular Right politicians with their boisterous “war on woke” which carries out overlapping attacks without the religious foundation. LGBTQI people and reproductive rights are the crucial targets for the interlinked movements. Trans people’s existence provides the wedge towards driving all LGBTQI people back into the closet. Britain has fallen from first to 14th place in LGBTQI rights rankings in only seven years, concurrent with the Tories’s Brexit debacle. Attacks on feminism from the traditional sex-role obsession of the Religious Right and defensive traditionalism of the secular Right are underpinning attacks on access to abortion. Driving women back out of the civic space and into the home is a shared passion. These campaigns are expanded in daily retail politics through disingenuous Right Wing media outlets in their culture war battles against the Left.

For less faith-driven “conservative” politicians, religion can also be deployed as a core characteristic of an embattled – mythical – national culture. Throughout the West this manifests as denoting Christianity as an integral component of Western Civilisation, also coded as White.(1) Any attention granted to First Nations or non-White people within the Right’s self-defined White nations is defined as divisive rather than reparatory. Reversing the various gains of the civil rights era is the goal. The blending of misogyny and various bigotries into the “conservative” supporter base draws misogynist Men’s Rights activists and White Supremacists into the cohort. There is a strong thread of this in Australian “conservative” politics with Tony Abbott (alongside his Budapest posse) as the most obvious warrior in defence of “Western Civilisation.” In Australia, we recently saw Bob Katter and Pauline Hanson touting their sudden interest in our Christian roots, with Katter even emulating Trump holding a bible aloft. This was posed as a rebuttal to Labor discussing a First Nations Voice to Parliament as well as the question of the relevance of Christian prayer in a secular Parliament. Inclusion is depicted as a destruction of all the glories of tradition. Diversity is an existential threat.

Pentecostal implacability

Given that the Australian “conservatism” has modelled itself particularly on its American partners for decades now, the US provides us with a critical warning. In America, the electoral contest is no longer a tussle between competing political platforms and styles; Religious Right dominance of the “conservative” party has made democracy literally impossible. Ezra Klein has analysed the current polarisation of their politics and noted that the overlap of many aspects of social identity has made political ideology far more tribal than it was historically. More problematic than that, however, is the certainty in Religious Right politics that the Left is an existential threat with no right to form government. While conservative Catholics and other faiths buttress the causes of the Religious Right in America, its dicta are dominated by Evangelical/Pentecostal tenets.(2) In this version of Christianity, Dominionism is central. This is the idea that Evangelical versions of Christianity must dominate the Seven Mountains of the civic space including government. The purity of the nation must be legislated and enforced. Within this cosmology, a secular state is a Satanic obstacle. Perhaps worse is the fact that natural disasters are seen as harbingers of End Times, so the more dramatic the impacts of the climate emergency, the more rapidly purified the nation must be.

The degree to which the growing Pentecostal movement is a poor fit with democracy requires understanding. Most institutions preach “spiritual warfare” where “literal demons” are present in people and events. Trump’s neo-charismatic “personal pastor,” Paula White, preached that Trump was fighting “a worldwide demonic conspiracy.” In this fringe world, LGBTQI people smell of demons and African and Asian sorcerers are a threat. Catholics and Mormons are said to practise dark magic. They argue that places and institutions such as bureaucracies, universities and journalism itself can be taken over by demonic forces. Spiritual warriors saw the Republican red of the map illustrating Trump’s victory as showing the “blood of Jesus” cleansing America’s sins. His election signified the looming overthrow of “Jezebel,” the literal demonic spirit behind reproductive and LGBTQI rights. The fantastical ideas that are compulsory parts of faith in these churches ready its adherents to accept other fantasies. In the pandemic era, the rapid growth of QAnon pervaded the evangelical churches, evident in Pentecostal Scott Morrison’s apology for “ritual” child abuse in Australia. QAnon’s focus on evil progressive elites stealing children was a comfortable fit for a faith that sees progressive political parties as evil. Much of the Trump support has taken on a religious devotional tone where he is the new saviour from the demonic Left.

Most Pentecostal/Evangelical traditions furthermore believe in a Rapture or Millennial Kingdom which destroys any impetus to tackle the climate crisis. Looming “End Times” create enormous anxiety about current moral status, but not about the future of the planet. This majority believes that storms and plagues are further signs of the imminence of the desired Premillennial moment. Geopolitical tensions arising from climate pressures will only be interpreted as more apocalyptic signs. Global action involves working with global political entities. Global entities, however, are depicted as aligned with the Antichrist. This is compounded by strategists within the fossil fuel sector driving Evangelicals to embrace these mineral resources as God’s gift which it would be ungrateful to leave in the ground. Rational debate is scotched in the face of divine mandate.

In this worldview, progressives are “godless.” Secularism is still linked to Communism. The freedom they demand is not “freedom from” but “freedom to.” The freedom to “force others to be free” only possible by “obedience to one narrow understanding of God’s plan.” Secular freedom, by contrast, leads to “chaos” and authoritarianism because tolerance is an imposition. The Evangelical movement’s pressure on American politics is such that no movement to protect equal rights is safe. The purity mission drives illogical policy making as well as being harmful to individuals within the churches. The attack on LGBTQI rights is such that the Southern Poverty Law Center has labelled a number of these lobby groups and churches as hate groups. The Dobbs decision overturning Roe v Wade and the resultant extremity of several states’ abortion laws illustrates the degree to which reproductive-aged women and AFAB people will be constrained and surveilled. Removing access to contraceptives has been raised too. The implication is that women’s access to the civic space will be revoked by uncontrolled fertility, and LGBTQI existence will be erased either visibly or actually.

This is not a movement that thinks in election cycles. It has taken almost a century for American businessmen and preachers appalled by atheist communism to make over the Republican Party as a Christian Libertarian force. Civic programs and civil rights were seen as the work of the enemy, crushing liberty. The government had no place in replacing elective charity with state programs. Instead of the sexual tolerance of libertarianism, however, this ideology is controlling. Socially, reactionary White Christians wanted their wives obedient, Segregation in place and their youth docile and chaste. Racism was inherent in White Evangelical churches, and a toxic emphasis on women’s purity and submission accompanied this. Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority took the decision to unify the movement over the issue of abortion and it became a powerful force against political liberalism through the 1980s. Together with Billy Graham they brought Christian Libertarianism and the Evangelical bloc ever closer to the levers of power.

Pentecostal/Evangelicals are now central to Republican power. Donald Trump received 80% of the white Evangelical vote in 2016 and 75% in 2020. They form 35% of the Republican coalition. Trump’s personal sins are dismissed in the pursuit of the rewards he could grant for their loyalty. In 2022 his demographic offers even more fervent support for his Big Lie with the convergence between Evangelicals and Qanon followers. The labels Christian Nationalist and even Christian Fascist are being embraced by the MAGA Right now. Trump surrounded himself with Evangelical and conservative Catholic figures. He achieved the primary goal of this coalition when he handed them control of the Supreme Court, one of America’s primary law-making institutions. The Federalist Society which gave Trump the names to place on the court is led by Opus Dei-linked Leonard Leo who has packed the court with “radical schismatic Catholics.”

#TradCaths and Rad Trads

Support for Evangelical positions comes from besieged “Rad Trad” Catholics in the Religious Right coalition who believe the Catholic church has been subverted from within. For some, Pope Francis’s institution is an “an antichristic church.” Others believe that he represents “the replacement of Catholicism with a globalist, multicultural “eco-theology,” grounded in socialism.” It is out of this fear and anger that Archbishop Viganò wrote to Donald Trump in 2020 supporting a Qanon-infused crusade against the liberal elite. This crusade is intricately intertwined with a European defence of “Judeo-Christian values” and of Western Civilization. These are coded messages in the White Supremacist perception that that old Europe is being overwhelmed by an Islamogauche (progressives aligned with Muslims) takeover.

Bill Barr, Trump’s last Attorney General, delivered an address at Notre Dame university in 2019 that illustrated the anxieties in ultra conservative Catholic circles. The “militant secularists” were executing a “campaign to destroy the traditional moral order.” All kinds of “social pathology” were undermining America as a result of this progressive war on the “traditional Judeo-Christian moral system.” Groups like Church Militant present a crusader model of Catholicism which fights alongside Evangelical Christians for an end to abortion and a return to “traditional” sex roles. Church Militant is also fighting alongside Groypers – the White Supremacist trolls and thugs that threaten anyone depicted as Other, who are becoming more overtly religious in their rhetoric.

The Christian Libertarian ideology is present in this Catholicism too. Steven Bannon, Trump ally, represents the most extreme libertarian position as well as ultra conservative Catholicism. His economic position was captured in his fostering what he described as Trump’s “deconstruction of the administrative state.” Bannon embraced this as part of his anarcho-capitalist project to destroy the system. He was posited as the antithesis to the Pope in the battle for Catholic allegiance and was at the forefront of the resistance to a diverse and inclusive church, as well as America. Bannon actively worked to spread Neo Nazi messaging in his time as Breitbartexecutive.

European Nativist/Religious fascism

This trend coincides with a worldwide resurgence of authoritarian regimes. In classic fascist mode, a central feature is intolerance and bigotry associated with the defence of a mythical past of national glory. Religion is a key component of the culture defended, of a homogenous nation these movements believe can be recreated if only its defenders are ruthless enough. It not only excludes those who are of different “race” and religio-cultural traditions, but also the liberal and inclusive blocs within the state. The coercive push to dictate how private lives are lived, and what life choices become criminalised, is central to these populist authoritarian forces. The defence of “family values” or “traditional culture” is used to justify persecution of the targeted “out groups” in typical fascist identity politics style. These regimes depict theoretically traditional roles for women and the exclusion of LGBTQI people as critical for public safety, community, and even national security. This is true in Russia, Republican America, Poland, Hungary, and Brazil. This trend is not limited to Christian nations. Modi’s “Hindu India” vision, for instance, embraces the same “tradition” justifications for oppression.

Catholic, Eastern Orthodox and Protestant traditions all become part of a Christian fight for a West they believe to be at risk of destruction. Last year in his state of the nation address, Russian Orthodox Putin declared the “Spiritual and moral values which some countries have started to forget have made us stronger, and we will always defend them.” Both ultra conservative Catholics and American Evangelicals have seen Putin – and his Hungarian Reformed Church echo, Orban – as a hero fighting back against the marauding non-whites, liberals, perverts and feminists of the modern world. Bannon factions in Catholicism revive the belief in Moscow as the Third Rome, believing that Putin’s Russia can be a bulwark against secular modernism. Pat Buchanan speculated that Putin might give the keynote speech at the World Congress of Families a few years back, summarising the perception: Putin’s stalwart fight for the “family values” campaign contrasted shamefully with an America that had capitulated to “a sexual revolution of easy divorce, rampant promiscuity, pornography, homosexuality, feminism, abortion, same-sex marriage, euthanasia, assisted suicide – the displacement of Christian values by Hollywood values.” Russian and American Evangelical “family values” groups have been working together since the 1990s. Having fought back their own godless totalitarian regime, nationalist Orthodox Christians tell their fellow “family value” activists that the Russians have the ability to help the Westerners defeat the new liberal totalitarianism. (This extreme end of the Republican Party also supports his invasion of Ukraine which is characterized as a defence of Christian Russia from Western weakness and homosexual dissolution.)

These prejudices permeate society in the former USSR. The Tokyo Olympic coverage in Russia featured derogatory talk about the taint of “perverts” and “psychopaths” at the games. Commentators complained in horror at LGBTQI athletes, who should be segregated into their own games away from wholesome athletes. Parliamentarians joined in expressing their disgust. In Russia’s neighbour Georgia, the 2013 “pogrom” against the LGBTQI rights parade is celebrated in these circles. Levan Vasadze, Georgia’s “family-values superhero” described it as the day Georgians “pushed back against the agents of the Western ‘totalitarian dictatorship of liberalism.’” The totalitarianism these former Iron Curtain dwellers – and their Western allies – imagine is characterised as the “total exclusion of religion and religious thought.” Within this international “family values” army there is absolutely no space to allow LGBTQI existence. In their essay on this united movement in 2015, journalist and author Masha Gessen interviewed the man about to lead the World Congress of Families. This took place two years after Gessen moved from Russia to America to protect their rainbow family. They asked him if they gave up some of the rights and freedoms that, effectively, marked them as equal, could they live alongside his Christian family in amity. He said starkly: “No.”

The accelerated changes of the modernising world have been particularly challenging for the countries long kept isolated by the Iron Curtain. Modern nations in the West embracing diversity in changes such as the legalising of same-sex marriage is only part of the challenge. The exodus from the Middle East and Africa of those displaced by climate and geopolitical crises (often created or exacerbated by Western interventions – regime change, military incursions, World Bank strictures) has added to the tensions in Eastern and Western Europe. Manipulated by Right-Wing movements and parties, “offering visions of a simpler, better society: a return to a romanticised vision of the nation,” the discomfort with rapid change is funnelled into virulent bigotry. This draws on 19th century quasi-religious conceptions of the nation with moral qualities implicit: the “cultural nation” was seen as rooted in religion, the most important of the “cultural goods.”(3) The “third wave” of radical Right activity in Europe brought religion back onto its agenda. Religion has become part of distinct version of ultra-nationalism and, to some degree, a cause of it. This is the identity politics that is invisible to the mainstream, linking conservatives and the radical Right.

While the radical Right’s identity politics is distinctly national, it is international too. Orban’s ideological influence is visible in Australian “conservative” circles. On the weekend of Morrison’s defeat in Australia, the hard right American “conservative” conference CPAC was hosted in Budapest. The attendees represent the most radical and Trumpian end of their political movement, gathered in the country that overtly represents their goal for home. Orban models virulent defence of Christian and Western civilisation in his overt focus on ethnic homogeneity. Elected originally as the cool leader of the youth party, he now instead boasts of making Hungary an “illiberal democracy.” Western liberalism represents weakness, miscegeny and immorality. CPAC’s organiser described Hungary as “one of the bastions of the conservative resistance to the ultraprogressive ‘woke’ revolution.” Orban opened the conference calling for the assembled to unite. “We need to find friends, and we need to find allies. We need to coordinate the movement of our troops, because we have a big challenge ahead of us.” They share the sense that the Great Replacement is a real threat: Jewish forces are importing Third World immigrants to replace the White Christian patriots. At home in America, the New York Times reports that the Murdochs are complacent about their chief pundit regularly promoting the theory. They also report that Australian News Corp editors are taking their instructions from Carlson’s show. Carlson made the CPAC visit possible when he broadcast for a week from Budapest in 2021, celebrating authoritarian order. Orban appeared at the Dallas CPAC event in August, repeating these toxic sentiments but will leave that to his acolytes in the Sydney CPAC to take place in October.

Australia

This decade of Coalition government in Australia has been deeply shaped by the international radical Right. The influence comes from the top through opulently-funded thinktanks to the mass’s conspiracy wild-lands, connected by internet platforms. The demographics are entwined by the Right’s media ecosphere fomenting panics across the socio-economic and educational strata. They infuse a mixture of deep belief and shared strategy. The manifestation of the battle and its constant effort to radicalise are focused in “culture wars” about distortions of trivial examples of liberal speech. Its bigotry has been on display from decades of abuse of refugees exercising their right to seek safe haven through to the cynical deployment of transphobia in the 2022 election. These bigotries reflect cultural anxieties amongst conservative groups but are justified and cleansed by an association with religious doctrine and superiority.

In Australia, the combined ethnonationalist and religious fearmongering has been domesticated into the Coalition’s own policies and messaging. The growth of the Religious Right faction in the parties has come to the fore over Morrison’s tenure. Its most divisive manifestation in this last term was the attempt to pass a religious discrimination bill. The core aim of the bill was to allow religious groups, dissatisfied by the passing of marriage equality legislation, the ability to discriminate according to the tenets of their faith. In the final week of the campaign, Morrison not only reignited talk of the bill, but allegedly had transphobe Katherine Deves’s campaign out of his office. Niki Savva described moderate Liberals as believing Morrison was aiming to purge the party of the figures described as “bedwetters.” Labor stepped carefully through the landmine of the religious discrimination debate. It had traditionally been a home of a working-class Catholic vote in Australia and retains politicians from that socially conservative demographic. Apparently, Anthony Albanese worked constantly communicating with progressive and faith-driven parliamentarians to unite to negotiate a path created to wedge them. Their goal was a version that would protect faith communities of all kinds without the harmful aspects of the bill.(4) Now fringe “conservative” politicians to the right of the main parties are working with conspiracy groups such as the “freedom” network, where Pentecostal religion is evident too.

In Australia, conservative religious movements have been recorded as branch-stacking LNP branches. Candidates are selected that do not reflect the values of the party or of the region to be represented. The result is that to vote “conservative” can mean to vote Religious Right. The campaign to co-opt the Victorian Liberal Party in particular has been documented in the press. In 2017 and 2018journalists recorded factional opposition to Mormons, conservative Catholics and Pentecostal groups targeting branches. The current campaign sees a number of very conservative preselections in the face of an attempt by the party to present itself as a progressive choice. The most notable is Moira Deeming who represents anti-trans and anti-abortion politics and was considered too extreme by Scott Morrison’s federal bloc. Last week, a new report emerged of stacking and attempts to take positions in the party’s internal state assembly.

An Existential Threat

The combined forces of religious extremism with religion as a central cultural attribute of a mythical national identity makes it a deeply dangerous force, with any groups in the community marked as a threat to the imagined homogeneity of the traditional nation targeted for increasingly ugly retribution. This perilous bigotry is used to garner support for hollowing out democracy in the interests of controlling diversity. The divisions and resulting democratic recession are disastrous in the face of the climate emergency. As the mainstream political Right becomes more colonised by these interconnected radical forces, it cripples the national and international ability to act on crises that threaten even human civilisation. As governments fail us, people in their desperation and anxiety turn to counterproductive “solutions.” The disasters and pressures inherent in the climate emergency serve to pour energy into the movements that most cripple our ability to minimise or respond to the challenges. Pentecostal religion in particular is tied to authoritarian movements around the world.

Progressives in Australia as elsewhere tend to focus on shorter term goals and risk much by ignoring the long-term strategising of the Right. The origins of the American radical Right’s production of the current moment’s crises can be sited in the Cold War, or even the Civil Rights era, depending on the narrative. Justice Samuel Alito’s majority decision in the Dodd case that overthrew Roe is only one of the cataclysms. Justice Clarence Thomas’s concurrence illustrates that he sees parallel precedents that made homosexuality legal and access to contraceptives possible should be overthrown too. Leading Republicans are now discussing making abortion illegal nationwide when they next hold power and moves to reverse LGBTQI equality have also been mooted. These impositions of extreme religious morality on a majority that does not support them are a culmination of years of work by political entrepreneurs of the Evangelical minority, bolstered by conservative Catholics. Legislating minority morality is only possible by undermining democracy. These same forces are at work in Australia, their enthusiasm to strip rights from Others within the nation galvanised by their peers’ success in America. The Coalition’s disdain for women in the civic space was a key factor in their May defeat. Their attacks on the nature of our democracy were legion. They continue to focus on American-style culture war battles to gin up the base even in the clear evidence of the disaster it has caused there. In concert with radicalised ethno-nationalist figures who see Christianity as a core marker of White Australian nationalism, the parties of the Australian Right are utterly infused with a toxic international Right’s concerns and strategies.

It is not just the rights of individuals but the (flawed) democracies that have gradually made room for civil rights for more groups than just property-owning White men that is at stake in the rise of the authoritarian Religious Right. These democracies are more likely than authoritarian regimes to protect the equality of Others, preventing the persecution and even the atrocities that religion-infused extremism can foster. Without data-driven secular governments, our capacity to tackle the climate emergency is crippled. It is critical that we perceive the risk that is reflected in the speeches of Scott Morrison to his Pentecostal audiences. It is not merely a foreign faith movement uncomfortably shoe-horned into our secular state; it is a threat of incalculable scope. We must work together to keep authoritarian religious radicalism out of our government.

(1) This is not limited to the West. Nor is Christianity the only faith drawn into the nativist nationalist trend. In India, the Hindutva movement aims to subdue all Indians within a Hindu nation with one faith and language. Shinto is central to a Japanese nationalist movement. Buddhism is key to Myanmar and Sri Lanka’s nationalist movements. Israel is self defining as a Jewish nation and imposing second class status on non-Jews within its borders.

(2) The overlaps and distinctions between Pentecostal and Evangelical protestant Christianity can be hard to delineate. The Pentecostal movement is the heart of the democratic crisis, with many churches infused with the Pentecostal ideas. It is the Pentecostal movement that is at the heart of the idea of Spiritual Warfare, Seven Mountains and Dominionism. Some Evangelical churches eschew these trends, but the overlap is strong particularly in the White Evangelical sphere. In the Trump and pandemic era, the American fashion has become strongly interwoven with QAnon and a deep devotion to Donald Trump. Elle Hardy’s account of the rapid growth of Pentecostalism around the world is important reading. Some institutions that are clearly Pentecostal deny the label because of the weight it has accrued. The most important unifying feature is the individual’s direct experience of the Holy Spirit. Pentecostalism is non-denominational and outside the traditional hierarchical Christian churches. Hardy estimates that globally 30% of Christians are now belong to the aberrant Pentecostal form of the faith and that by 2050, 1 in 10 people will belong to the movement.

(3) German historian Friedrich Meinecke writing in 1908 quoted in Michael Minkenberg’s chapter “Religion and the Radical Right” in the Oxford Handbook of the Radical Right. Minkenberg explores the complexity of religion as part of nationalism in increasingly secular societies.

(4) This was gleaned from a lengthy off-the-record conversation with a – then – Shadow ministerial staffer.


Dear reader, we need your support

Independent sites such as The AIMN provide a platform for public interest journalists. From its humble beginning in January 2013, The AIMN has grown into one of the most trusted and popular independent media organisations.

One of the reasons we have succeeded has been due to the support we receive from our readers through their financial contributions.

With increasing costs to maintain The AIMN, we need this continued support.

Your donation – large or small – to help with the running costs of this site will be greatly appreciated.

You can donate through PayPal or credit card via the button below, or donate via bank transfer: BSB: 062500; A/c no: 10495969

Donate Button

 

About Lucy Hamilton 7 Articles
Lucy is Melbourne born and based. She studied humanities at Melbourne and Monash universities, until family duties killed her PhD project. She is immersed in studying the global democratic recession.

15 Comments

  1. Trump is again a central poser for utter and extreme ignorance. He has gathered a team of disgusteroony loonies, who mistake egofixated vanity and echoing emptiness for ability and positivity. The USA is positively damaged, heading for doom and can bring down much around it. We should detach, distance, deploy, desert if necessary.

  2. BTW I intended to redraft this for the now, but found that the 2022 picture to be an interesting counterpoint as it is. I hope you find the two valuable. I didn’t want this essay to be lost at the disappearing theaimn-dot-com, even though its old read count of 20,000 is lost forever in the mists of pre-new-counter time. I know it’s now an even lengthier demand on your time, patience and tolerance, so I hope anyone who persists finds the experience worthwhile.

  3. As christianity in it’s thousands and thousands of flavours slowly but surely continues to shrink the rusted on religious become ever desperate and frightened about being shunted off to the sidelines and becoming irrelevant.

  4. I am stunned at the presentation in this article. I am a messianic believer. I do not belong to organised religious groups. I am tertiary educated in Science and Education. To see myself as a dangerous right wing extremist who poses an existential risk to society is gobsmacking. I live by Torah commands which Christ summarised as love God by keeping his commandments and loving your neighbour as yourself. In this case love is an action not words. All my life I have served God and fellow citizens and neighbours by freely giving of my time and my resources, putting the needs of others ahead of my own needs. Christ said He only spoke the words of His Father and did what he saw the Father do. I have the indwelling of God which enables me to do the same. Christ said ” I am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father but by me”. People of faith speak what God has spoken. God says that His words can offend. It is God’s words that have the prophetic power to transform lives. So is this article saying God is an evil influence and an existential threat to life? All I can say is you have got to be kidding.

  5. “… saying God is an evil influence and an existential threat to life?”

    How many people has the sky fairy killed because he was ticked off? How many untold millions of people have been killed in it’s name? Loving? Anything but!

  6. Lucy: Nice work!

    A perspective: There are 8.2 billion people on this tiny planet. With an average life expectancy of 73 years 3.56 die every second. Whomever is welcoming the incoming at the gates to heaven and hell must have their patter short and sweet and talk fast in whatever language. For those who are undecided whether to be religious or not, just consider what the various religious leaders say while conveying the word of god. They cannot all be right while being so different.

  7. Bev Poulos

    It’s complicated!

    So is this article saying God is an evil influence and an existential threat to life? All I can say is you have got to be kidding.

    If you are a Palestinian you could well see this God as an evil influence and an existential threat to life but if you are an Israeli entrepreneur you may well say that the prophecies are coming good and soon it will be all condos on the Mediterranean coast in the place they used to call Gaza………for the true believers that is.

  8. Bev,Poulos, I have just come from a long lunch with two of my sisters, both devout Christians. We met because a third sister is not very well, looking like end of life, and so discussed life, death, the meaning of it all.

    Interestingly, there are children the extended family with diverse self definitions, and the love expressed for them was wonderful, where as what we are seeing within the Liberal Party and the LNP in Queensland a reversion to discriminatory policies on sex and sexual definition. We see from the leader of the opposition a push to get rid of diversity in the public service, meaning a targeting of people of diverse definitions, be it sexual orientation or race or disability, echoing the policies of Donald Trump.

    I think it is good that you have your faith, that faith is between you and your god, but it is not the role of government to promote a faith based agenda or to have policies which discriminate on the basis of faith, or of disability or of sexuality or of any other means by which people are differentiated or judged.

    It you want a theocratic government look to Iran or Afghanistan or Israel.

    It is not god which is an evil influence, it is those who are insisting that laws and the treatment of people by those who act in the name of their god that are an evil influence.

    I very much support the ideal that no religion is a state religion. Even the commencement of the Parliamentary sitting days with the lord’s prayer is an affront.

  9. And those same perennial 100+ year targets eg. woke, left etc. of US ultra conservative political Christians being used by Koch & their ‘owned’ GOP as a delivery system for votes in the US.

    Related are old talking points we hear from Dutton*, social media campaigns, word of mouth and constant Orwellian dog whistling to try befuddle the low info and older voters &/or induce pensioner populism.

    Now Christians claim ownership of Judaism from ‘Jews for Jesus’ etc., Netanyahu indirectly supporting the anti-semitic Soros Conspiracy used in Hungary etc. while the RW Pentecostal Christian US use their influence for the Rapture in Jerusalem, then ‘family values’ & Christianism of Abbott’s chum Orbán, and many of the same support for Putin’s Russian illiberalism, autocracy, orthodox patriarchy, nationalism and corruption vs the EU, liberal democracy, US, the west etc..

    *Dutton’s post anti-semitic arson & graffiti stunts, claims ‘left are anti-semitic’, online RW campaigns and consequent word of mouth, denigrating or dog whistling liberal democracy, the centre, leaders & parties; e.g. ‘they are all the same’ (even heard from ALP voters ranting in the bush too), so don’t vote?

    Redolent of the Frankfurt School being targeted for ‘cultural Marxism’ inc liberalism, Jews etc. now known as ‘woke’, during the Weimar era by NSDAP:

    ‘Cultural Marxism” refers to a far-right antisemitic conspiracy theory that misrepresents Western Marxism (especially the Frankfurt School) as being responsible for modern progressive movements, identity politics, and political correctness.

    The conspiracy theory posits that there is an ongoing and intentional academic and intellectual effort to subvert Western society via a planned culture war that undermines the supposed Christian values of traditionalist conservatism and seeks to replace them with culturally liberal values

    A contemporary revival of the N*zi propaganda term “Cultural Bolshevism”, the contemporary version of the conspiracy theory originated in the United States during the 1990s. Originally found only on the far-right political fringe, the term began to enter mainstream discourse in the 2010s and is now found globally.

    The conspiracy theory of a Marxist culture war is promoted by right-wing politicians, fundamentalist religious leaders, political commentators in mainstream print and television media, and white supremacist terrorists and has been described as “a foundational element of the alt-right worldview”.

    Scholarly analysis of the conspiracy theory has concluded that it has no basis in fact.’ (Wiki)

  10. Trump’s ridiculous order dictating that sex/gender is assigned at conception

    I’m just wondering how many USAnians realise that the wording of that particular executive order declared every single person in the country to be female. Whoever wrote it has absolutely zero understanding of the complexities of biological sex determinism in Homo supposedlysapiens (or mammals in general).

    Bev Poulos:

    To see myself as a dangerous right wing extremist is gobsmacking

    Do you want to impose your own beliefs and way of life on the rest of the country, regardless of their wishes and beliefs? Are you certain that your way is the only way and that others must conform? If so then a dangerous right wing extremist is exactly what you are.
    Your belief dictates your life, not anyone else’s.

  11. Religion is by men for men. Women are not considered beyond the big 3 TLC reworked
    ps
    good one bev.
    Here you can express your thoughts but in the torah: god made you for baking, cooking, washing, caring for her children, etc, unless her marriage had given the husband a large dowry
    as for women reading torah Kovod HaTzibbur is against it?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*