Last Saturday, vice presidential candidate JD Vance appeared at an event in
Monroeville, Pennsylvania, hosted by Lance Wallnau, a self-proclaimed “apostle,”
which means he’s a leader in a rapidly growing religious movement called the New
Apostolic Reformation. NAR is a loose network of evangelical Christians, who
believe that they are called to take over all aspects of society, including the
government. They also believe that God speaks directly to certain Christians,
whom they call prophets, often in dreams.
Lance Wallnau, a former businessman who hails from Texas, has been an
influential leader in NAR circles for some time. He popularized one of its most
popular concepts, the idea that there are seven “mountains” that Christians must
conquer: family, religion, education, media, arts and entertainment, business,
and government. That last one has become a centerpiece of his mission. He has
said he believes that the political left is possessed by demons, that there is
“witchcraft” controlling the presidential election, and that Vice President
Kamala Harris is a Jezebel—a reference to a prostitute in the Bible. As he put
it in a recent broadcast, “When you’ve got somebody operating in manipulation,
intimidation, and domination—especially when it’s in a female role trying to
emasculate a man who is standing up for truth—you’re dealing with the Jezebel
spirit.”
But for Wallnau, politics are more than just material for fire-and-brimstone
sermons, because he has an ambitious plan for the 2024 presidential election.
It’s called Project 19, a reference to the 19 counties in swing states that
could determine the outcome.
Fred Clarkson, a researcher with the religious extremism watchdog group
Political Research Associates, has reported that Wallnau sometimes says swing
states aren’t fully red because people aren’t praying hard enough. Wallnau said
earlier this year, “If we don’t have apostles and prophets in the territory,
then demons control the territory and the minds of people are under the
influence of devils.” As my colleague David Corn wrote this week, Wallnau has
been promoting Project 19 on what he has called the Courage Tour—a multi-stop
traveling road show through swing states to energize evangelical voters and
encourage voter registration. The Pennsylvania event last weekend that featured
JD Vance took place after visits to Arizona, Michigan, and Georgia.
> “If we don’t have apostles and prophets in the territory, then demons control
> the territory and the minds of people are under the influence of devils.”
The specifics of Project 19 are hard to come by, but one key detail is that
Wallnau’s partner on the project is the America First Policy Institute, a
right-wing political activism group helmed by a cadre of former Trump
administration officials, including Brooke Rollins, who was acting director of
the United States Domestic Policy Council under Trump, and Larry Kudlow, the
former director of the National Economic Council. After he lost the 2020
election, Trump donated $1 million to AFPI.
AFPI hasn’t said much about Project 19 in recent months. But there are some
signs that the initiative is quietly mobilizing for a final electoral push.
It turns out that over the past several weeks, America First Works, the
political action arm of the America First Policy Institute, has posted several
listings on Red Balloon, a right-wing job board. The posts, which have separate
entries for each swing state, solicit applications for “county coordinators,”
who “will lead and implement Project 19’s strategic vision in their region,
providing boots on the ground and hands-on experience. This includes managing
local research, content creation, coalition building, grassroots contact, and
educational initiatives focused on America First messaging.”
Like its parent organization, America First Works is helmed by right-wing power
players. Texas billionaire Tim Dunn serves as chairman, and Linda McMahon, a
former pro-wrestler who led the Small Business Administration under Trump,
serves on its board. The group has partnered with other conservative and
Christian organizations around political organizing; last July, for example, it
teamed up with Turning Point Action on a voter mobilization initiative.
Back in April, America First Works’ executive director, Ashley Hayek, appeared
on Fox News. She explained that Project 19, which Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-NY) leads,
is about “messaging and data, it’s unifying the movement, it’s project 19,
focusing on the counties that we believe will ultimately determine the next
election, it’s our ballot harvesting and voter mobilization, and then, of
course, day one of what a new administration looks like.”
How successful this initiative will be remains to be seen—evangelicals
themselves point out that as a group, they are famously under-registered as
voters. But getting out the vote is only part of the strategy. As independent
journalist Judd Legum reported, Wallnau’s rally with Vance in Pennsylvania also
featured Joshua Standifer, founder of the Christian political activism group
Lion of Judah. Standifer described what he called a “Trojan horse” strategy:
having evangelicals sign up to become poll workers. A guide that can be
downloaded for free at the Lion of Judah’s website tells readers that by
becoming poll workers, they can “bring light into darkness and influence the
communities around them by running for office and actively seeking to bring
Jesus’ Kingdom on Earth as it is in Heaven.”
It continues: “Simply put, our goal is to elevate as many Christian Patriots as
possible to become Election Workers. Having Believers in key positions of
influence in government like Election Workers is the first step on the path to
victory this Fall.”