Newly elected House Speaker Mike Johnson’s path in Republican politics started with a yearslong position because the senior legal professional and nationwide spokesperson for a bunch on the non secular proper devoted to dismantling LGBTQ+ freedoms and outlawing abortion.
Johnson labored for that group, Alliance Defending Freedom, for eight years, from 2002 to 2010, earlier than serving a short stint as a Louisiana state legislator after which heading to Congress in 2017. He first turned a identified entity in his state within the late Nineties when he and his spouse went on nationwide tv because the face of Louisiana’s new marriage covenant legal guidelines, which made it more durable to break up.
The social conservative causes which have fueled Johnson’s rise, lots of that are deeply unpopular with the American public, are already worrisome to Democrats who concern that Johnson — who downplayed the idea of the separation of church and state as not too long ago as April — could attempt to use the ability of the speakership to advance his excessive views.
But some see a flip facet, too: He is the right foil for the Democratic Party to run towards in 2024.

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Johnson spent years making a reputation for himself at Alliance Defending Freedom, which was based in 1993 and designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, the nationwide group that screens the actions of home hate teams and right-wing extremists.
Lambda Legal, a nationwide civil rights group targeted on LGBTQ+ communities, has beforehand referred to Alliance Defending Freedom as ”arguably essentially the most excessive anti-LGBT authorized group within the United States.”
The core mission of the Christian authorized advocacy group, which was once known as Alliance Defense Fund, is “to remake American law so that it favors cisgender, heterosexual, conservative, white Christian men and everyone [else] is a second-class citizen,” stated Andrew Seidel, an legal professional and writer of “The Founding Myth: Why Christian Nationalism Is Un-American.”
“If you look at the cases they’ve taken … everything they are doing is designed to get to that end goal,” Seidel stated. “It is absolutely striking that this person [is] a couple of heartbeats away from the presidency.”
An Alliance Defending Freedom spokesperson pushed again on the concept the group is a hate group and directed HuffPost to a web page on the group’s web site that’s devoted fully to discrediting the Southern Poverty Law Center.
“While serving at Alliance Defending Freedom, Congressman Mike Johnson defended the rule of law and Americans’ most cherished liberties,” Kristen Waggoner, CEO and president of Alliance Defending Freedom, stated in an announcement. “We congratulate and wish him the best as he continues his service to our nation protecting the Constitution and all Americans’ foundational freedoms.”
In his position on the group, Johnson in 2004 efficiently defended Louisiana’s constitutional modification that defines marriage as “the union of one man and one woman.”
The Family Research Council, one other far-right anti-LGBTQ+ group that has been designated a hate group, honored Johnson with an award for that victory. It celebrated Johnson’s authorized argument that Louisiana’s modification “has one purpose: to protect marriage from attack.”
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In 2005, Johnson led the Alliance Defending Freedom’s campaign to counter GLSEN’s annual anti-bullying Day of Silence. GLSEN was previously known as the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network.
“No one is for bullying and harassment,” Johnson said at the time. “But that’s cloaking their real message — that homosexuality is good for society.”
That same year, he joined Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.), a state legislator at the time, on a “Future of Marriage” panel at the Young Republicans National Convention. Johnson, representing Alliance Defending Freedom, argued that domestic partner ordinances were nonsense and really about trying to force Christians to embrace a certain ideology.
“Regardless of what you hear, it is not about benefits, OK?” Johnson said, noting he was leading a lawsuit at the time to eliminate New Orleans’ domestic partner ordinance.
Referring to gay couples as “same-sex, live-in lovers,” Johnson told the group that the real reason LGBTQ+ people wanted domestic partner benefits was to have “that lifestyle made legitimate. It’s about recognition of the lifestyle. It’s about teaching it as the equivalent of marriage. And don’t let anybody fool you and tell you otherwise.”
Here is a clip of Johnson condemning gay, live-in lovers:
In 2003, Johnson went so far as to write an editorial in support of criminalizing gay sex, as CNN first reported on Wednesday.
Johnson has led plenty of other Alliance Defending Freedom lawsuits aimed at stripping women of their reproductive rights. In 2012, he sued the Obama administration for requiring religious employers to cover birth control in their health insurance coverage.
“The Obama administration has purposely transformed a non-existent problem — access to contraception — into a constitutional crisis,” Johnson claimed at the time.
The conservative-led Supreme Court ultimately ruled in 2020 that religious employers can deny birth control coverage.
In another case in 2005, Johnson argued in federal court that New York had violated the Constitution when it rejected “Choose Life” specialty license plates as part of a state-funded program.
“The state has no objective standards to govern the DMV’s decision regarding whether an eligible organization’s plate design is approved,” Johnson said at the time. “The denial of The Children First Foundation’s design is a prime example of the discrimination that can occur.”
Alliance Defending Freedom won that lawsuit in 2011 after seven years of litigation.
The Louisiana Republican claimed in 2007 that most people simply don’t understand Roe v. Wade — the landmark 1973 Supreme Court decision guaranteeing a woman’s right to have an abortion that was struck down in 2022 — and argued that if they did, they would not like it. Only one-third of Americans supported Roe v. Wade being overturned, according to polling.
“The abortion industry has waged a decadeslong deception campaign to suppress the truth about abortion,” Johnson told CBNNewsa branch of the conservative Christian Broadcasting Network founded by the late televangelist Pat Robertson. “If Americans knew the truth about Roe, they wouldn’t be as supportive.”
Shortly after Johnson was sworn in as speaker on Wednesday, Democratic operatives were eager to highlight his staunch social conservatism. President Joe Biden has signaled that he plans to run for reelection with messaging about protecting freedoms, including marriage equality and abortion rights.
“If Democrats could design in a lab the perfect candidate to run against, that person would look a lot like Mike Johnson,” Dan Pfeiffer, who served as the communications director in President Barack Obama’s White House, wrote in his newsletter.
Others said it was important the party break through Johnson’s cooler disposition, which sets him apart from his fellow conservative bomb-throwers.
“Scary guy,” said one senior Democratic operative. “Jim Jordan, but with better demeanor.”
This operative was referring to Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), a diehard ally of former President Donald Trump who also ran for speaker but was thwarted by colleagues for being a bully.
“Scary guy. Jim Jordan, but with better demeanor.”
– Senior Democratic operative
Most Democrats in Congress don’t know much about Johnson beyond his record of being very anti-LGBTQ+ and anti-abortion. Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) said he represents many in the GOP who are intent on rolling back basic liberties that were otherwise thought to be enshrined in the nation’s legal framework.
“The new speaker is an unknown,” Blumenthal said Wednesday. “In terms of what his past positions will mean for future legislation … that incorporates the views that he expressed in the past relating to LGBTQ rights or reproductive health care.”
Johnson has certainly taken some strange stands in the vein of conservative Christian legal advocacy. In 2015, as the attorney for a Christian creationist ministry called Answers in Genesis, Johnson filed a federal lawsuit to get tax subsidies to build a Noah’s Ark amusement park in Kentucky.
He wrote an op-ed the year before making the case for building the Ark Encounter.
“When the Ark Project sails, everybody will benefit,” wrote Johnson, “even those who are stubbornly trying to sink it.”
The Noah’s Ark park was eventually built and, as of 2017, was receiving $18 million in tax incentives.
The Washington Post via Getty Images
Johnson has not tamed his ideology since coming into Congress. In April, he gave a speech decrying the “so-called separation of church and state,” insisting there was nothing within the Constitution barring the federal government from supporting non secular beliefs.
“The Founders wanted to protect the church from an encroaching state, not the other way around,” Johnson said.
The establishment and free exercise clauses of the Constitution’s First Amendment — “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof” — are generally viewed as limiting both the government’s involvement in religion and religion’s involvement in government.
Seidel said what is particularly worrisome about Johnson’s ties to Alliance Defending Freedom is how powerful and connected the group is.
Conservative Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett did five paid speaking engagements for the group before being confirmed to the high court. Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) previously took money from the group, too. Hawley’s wife, Erin Hawley, is currently senior counsel at Alliance Defending Freedom and leading its legal effort to ban medication abortion nationwide.
Alliance Defending Freedom has been “working to build this shadowy network of power for decades,” Seidel said, noting that it has amassed an incredible amount of money. It declared more than $104 million in revenue for 2021.
“They’re a juggernaut,” he said.
“So now you have a guy who is a constitutional attorney who is dialed into this network of power, with more than $100 million annually,” Seidel added. “Put those two things together. He was one of the architects of denying the election. It’s terrifying. Really, truly terrifying.”
Kevin Robillard and Igor Bobic contributed reporting.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mike-johnson-alliance-defending-freedom-lgbtq-abortion_n_65397493e4b0c8556103d114