Christine O'Donnell's Jesus Squad
Does the Delaware insurgent's campaign foreshadow the marriage of tea party and Christian right?— By Suzy Khimm
Thu Sep. 16, 2010 3:00 AM PDT
Christine O'Donnell's massive upset of Rep. Mike Castle in Delaware's Republican Senate primary has been cast as one of the tea party's biggest coups. After her campaign caught fire among tea partiers nationwide, the Tea Party Express pledged to sink some $250,000 into the race and repeat Joe Miller's surprise primary victory over Sen. Lisa Murkowski in Alaska. O'Donnell herself has remained focused on the tea party's hallmark crusades against big government spending throughout her race, slamming Castle for his support of the TARP bailout and cap-and-trade climate change legislation, all while avoiding social issues. But O'Donnell's victory also marks a step forward for the Christian right, which her campaign has quietly begun to court—and which could end up riding the tea party wave back into the halls of power.
O'Donnell first came into the public eye in the 1990s as a foot soldier of the religious right, becoming a press secretary for the anti-abortion group Concerned Women for America, which aims "to bring Biblical principles into all levels of public policy." A devout (and still unmarried) Catholic, she founded the Savior's Alliance for Lifting the Truth, which promoted abstinence and Christian sexual values among college students—an effort that resulted in her now-infamous crusade against masturbation. In 1997, she denounced the government for devoting too much money to AIDS treatment and prevention, criticizing a drag queen ball for celebrating "the type of lifestyle which leads to the disease." From the gays and abortion to evolution—which she's called "a theory" that "too many people are blindly accepting…as fact"—O'Donnell has been a Christian right champion.
In her current Senate bid, O'Donnell has campaigned more as a tea partier, preaching against government spending and Democratic overreach. But she has also used the money that anti-government activists have poured into her campaign to obtain support from Christian and evangelical activists. According to filings with the Federal Election Commission, the O'Donnell campaign in June paid over $5,100 to Response Unlimited, which bills itself as "the nation's best and most comprehensive source of mailing lists for conservative and Christian mailers and telemarketers." Major social conservative outfits—from the Christian Coalition of America to Jerry Falwell's Liberty University—have used the Virginia-based firm in the past to raise funds from conservative Christians. Back in 2005, the company drew fire for brokering a deal with Terry Schiavo's father to buy his list of supporters while Schiavo was still alive in a vegetative state. ...........(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://motherjones.com/politics/2010/09/christine-odonnell-christian-right-connections