

A focus on culture wars now defines the Republican Party.

By Juan Williams
Columnist
Look at these quotes with alarm.
โWe need to be the party of nationalism and Iโm a Christian, and I say it proudly, we should be Christian nationalists.โ
That is Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) calling for todayโs GOP to insist its members be evangelical Christians or get out.
Hereโs a second quote hammering the same religious intolerance.
โIโm tired of this separation of church and state junk โ thatโs not in the Constitution.โ
That is Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) insisting Congress and the government follow only Christian evangelical church teaching.
Her words stand in defiance of constitutional protections for the United States as a nation based on laws and not religious orthodoxy.
Now, hereโs a third explicit call for the GOP to be a party of religious hatred.
โWeโre not bending the knee to the two percent anymore,โ said Andrew Torba, founder of the right-wing-friendly social platform Gab, referring to Jewish people in the United States.
Gab is characterized by CNN as โa haven for QAnon conspiracies, misinformation and antisemitic commentary.โ The platform was paid a โconsultingโ fee by Doug Mastriano, the Republican running for governor in Pennsylvania.
READ ENTIRE ARTICLE AT THE HILL


