President Donald Trump announced today that he is creating a presidential commission on religious liberty to root out the “unlawful and improper anti-Christian” policies that were rampant during the Biden administration.
The president delivered remarks at two events in Washington D.C. Thursday morning surrounding the the National Prayer Breakfast.
“It’s going to be a very big deal,” Trump promised at the second event at the Washington Hilton. “Unfortunately, in recent years we’ve seen this sacred liberty threatened like never before in American history. ”
On January 24, Trump issued pardons for 23 pro-life protesters, who were in jail for violating the federal Freedom of Access to Clinics (FACE) Act.
“Most of us would not have believed it possible that a grandmother with a severe medical condition … would be put in jail for praying here in America,” the president said.
Trump described how one of the prayer Breakfast attendees, Paulette Harlow, “was arrested for peacefully praying outside of a clinic, charged under an obscure law that hadn’t been used in years—selectively weaponized against Christians by the previous administration.”
Harlow, 75, was sentenced in May 2024 to 24 months in prison following her convictions for “federal conspiracy against rights and Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act offenses” in connection with a pro-life group’s blockade of a Washington, D.C., area abortion clinic on Oct. 22, 2020, according to the Biden Justice Department.
According to Trump, the bias didn’t stop with Biden’s anti-Christian prosecutors: “At her sentencing, the judge mocked Paulette’s Christian faith,” he recounted.
The president said that although he won the religious vote in the 2024 election “by a lot,” the Biden regime was so “terrible” to Christians, he was amazed that Kamala Harris got any of their votes at all.
“They were terrible! They were terrible to you and they were to people of all religions!” he exclaimed.
Trump said it was his honor to grant Paulette and the other persecuted Christians “a full and unconditional pardon.”
“We got them out of there!” the president crowed, before joking that Harlow “got lucky that I won that election.”
The president added that what happened to the elderly pro-life grandmother, “must never happen again in America.”
Trump said he will sign an executive order later today to create a task force headed by Attorney General Pam Bondi “to eradicate anti-Christian bias” in the U.S. government.
“The mission of this task force will be to immediately halt all forms of anti-Christian targeting and discrimination within the federal government, Trump explained, “including at the DOJ—which was absolutely terrible—the IRS, the FBI—terrible!”
Trump added that the task force will also focus on anti-Christian violence and vandalism in America, which spiked during the Biden years, and went mostly unpunished.
In the months after a draft of the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe was leaked to the press in May 2022, the Catholic News Agency tracked 112 attacks against Catholic churches, pro-life pregnancy centers, maternity homes, and other pro-life organizations across the country. The attacks took the form of “vulgar graffiti, property damage, threats, theft, and arson,” CNA reported.
The president promised that his administration “will move heaven and earth to defend the rights of Christians and religious believers nationwide.”
“This is a very powerful document I’m signing,” he added. “If we don’t have religious liberty, we don’t have a free country—we probably don’t have a country.”
Trump announced that he was also creating a White House Faith Office, to be headed by Pastor Paula White, an American televangelist, apostolic leader in the Independent Charismatic movement, and proponent of “prosperity theology.”
Trump said the new office will work to protect Christians “in our schools, in our military, in our government, in our workplaces, hospitals, in our public squares, and we will bring our country back together as one nation under God with liberty and justice to all.”
The president also recounted how God had “saved” him last year when he turned his head at just the right moment during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Trump was shot and wounded in his upper right ear by 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks, who fired eight rounds from an AR-15–style rifle from the roof of an unsecured building that was only about 400 feet away.
“It was a shot that should not have been missed,” Trump said, adding, “well, it got me a little bit.”
The president said his sons Eric and Don Jr, both told him a shot from that distance was “like sinking a one foot putt.”
Trump recalled that Don Jr. told him afterward that he had been saved by God.
“You could say it’s a miracle,” Trump told the attendees, “but it was really God that saved me.”
Update:
Trump’s Executive Order: Eradicating Anti-Christian Bias:
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, it is hereby ordered:
Section 1. Purpose and Policy. It is the policy of the United States, and the purpose of this order, to protect the religious freedoms of Americans and end the anti-Christian weaponization of government. The Founders established a Nation in which people were free to practice their faith without fear of discrimination or retaliation by their government.
For that reason, the United States Constitution enshrines the fundamental right to religious liberty in the First Amendment. Federal laws like the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2000bb et seq.), further prohibit government interference with Americans’ rights to exercise their religion. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2000e et seq.), prohibits religious discrimination in employment while Federal hate-crime laws prohibit offenses committed due to religious animus.
Yet the previous Administration engaged in an egregious pattern of targeting peaceful Christians, while ignoring violent, anti-Christian offenses. The Biden Department of Justice sought to squelch faith in the public square by bringing Federal criminal charges and obtaining in numerous cases multi-year prison sentences against nearly two dozen peaceful pro-life Christians for praying and demonstrating outside abortion facilities. Those convicted included a Catholic priest and 75-year-old grandmother, as well as an 87-year-old woman and a father of 11 children who were arrested 18 months after praying and singing hymns outside an abortion facility in Tennessee as a part of a politically motivated prosecution campaign by the Biden Administration. I rectified this injustice on January 23, 2025, by issuing pardons in these cases.
At the same time, Catholic churches, charities, and pro-life centers sought justice for violence, theft, and arson perpetrated against them, which the Biden Department of Justice largely ignored. After more than 100 attacks, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution condemning this violence and calling on the Biden Administration to enforce the law.
Then, in 2023, a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) memorandum asserted that “radical-traditionalist” Catholics were domestic-terrorism threats and suggested infiltrating Catholic churches as “threat mitigation.” This later-retracted FBI memorandum cited as support evidence propaganda from highly partisan sources.
The Biden Department of Education sought to repeal religious-liberty protections for faith-based organizations on college campuses. The Biden Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sought to force Christians to affirm radical transgender ideology against their faith. And the Biden Department of Health and Human Services sought to drive Christians who do not conform to certain beliefs on sexual orientation and gender identity out of the foster-care system. The Biden Administration declared March 31, 2024 — Easter Sunday — as “Transgender Day of Visibility.”
In this atmosphere of anti-Christian government, hostility and vandalism against Christian churches and places of worship surged, with the number of such identified acts in 2023 exceeding by more than eight times the number from 2018. Catholic churches and institutions have been aggressively targeted with hundreds of acts of hostility, violence, and vandalism.
My Administration will not tolerate anti-Christian weaponization of government or unlawful conduct targeting Christians. The law protects the freedom of Americans and groups of Americans to practice their faith in peace, and my Administration will enforce the law and protect these freedoms. My Administration will ensure that any unlawful and improper conduct, policies, or practices that target Christians are identified, terminated, and rectified.
Sec. 2. Establishing a Task Force to Eradicate Anti-Christian Bias. (a) There is hereby established within the Department of Justice the Task Force to Eradicate Anti-Christian Bias (Task Force).
(b) The Attorney General shall serve as Chair of the Task Force.
(c) In addition to the Chair, the Task Force shall consist of the following other members:
(i) the Secretary of State;
(ii) the Secretary of the Treasury;
(iii) the Secretary of Defense;
(iv) the Secretary of Labor;
(v) the Secretary of Health and Human Services;
(vi) the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development;
(vii) the Secretary of Education;
(viii) the Secretary of Veterans Affairs;
(ix) the Secretary of Homeland Security;
(x) the Director of the Office of Management and Budget;
(xi) Representative of the United States of America to the United Nations;
(xii) the Administrator of the Small Business Administration;
(xiii) the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation;
(xiv) the Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy;
(xv) the Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency;
(xvi) the Chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; and
(xvii) the heads of such other executive departments, agencies, and offices that the Chair may, from time to time, invite to participate.Sec. 3. Task Force Functions. (a) The Task Force shall meet as required by the Chair and shall take appropriate action to:
(i) review the activities of all executive departments and agencies (agencies), including the Department of State, the Department of Justice, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Labor, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Education, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, over the previous Administration and identify any unlawful anti-Christian policies, practices, or conduct by an agency contrary to the purpose and policy of this order;
(ii) recommend to the head of the relevant agency steps to revoke or terminate any violative policies, practices, or conduct identified under subsection (3)(a)(i) of this section and remedial actions to fulfill the purpose and policy of this order;
(iii) share information and develop strategies to protect the religious liberties of Americans and advance the purpose and policy of this order;
(iv) solicit information and ideas from a broad range of individuals and groups, including Americans affected by anti-Christian conduct, faith-based organizations, and State, local, and Tribal governments, in order to ensure that its work is informed by a broad spectrum of ideas and experiences;
(v) identify deficiencies in existing laws and enforcement and regulatory practices that have contributed to unlawful anti-Christian governmental or private conduct and recommend to the relevant agency head, or recommend to the President, through the Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and the Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy, as applicable, appropriate actions that agencies may take to remedy failures to fully enforce the law against acts of anti-Christian hostility, vandalism, and violence; and
(vi) recommend to the President, through the Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and the Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy, any additional Presidential or legislative action necessary to rectify past improper anti-Christian conduct, protect religious liberty, or otherwise fulfill the purpose and policy of this order.
(b) In order to advise the President regarding its work and assist the President in formulating future policy, the Task Force shall submit to the President, through the Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and the Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy:
(i) a report within 120 days from the date of this order regarding the Task Force’s initial work;
(ii) a report within 1 year from the date of this order that summarizes the Task Force’s work; and
(iii) a final report upon the dissolution of the Task Force.Sec. 4. Administration. (a) The heads of agencies shall, to the extent permitted by law, upon the request of the Chair, provide the Task Force with any information required by the Task Force for the purpose of carrying out its functions.
(b) The Department of Justice shall provide such funding and administrative and technical support as the Task Force may require, to the extent permitted by law and as authorized by existing appropriations.Sec. 5. Termination. The Task Force shall terminate 2 years from the date of this order unless extended by the President.
Sec. 6. General Provisions. (a) Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:
(i) the authority granted by law to an executive department or agency, or the head thereof; or
(ii) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.
(b) This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.
(c) This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.
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