A network of ultrawealthy Christian donors is spending nearly $12 million to mobilize Republican-leaning voters and purge more than a million people from the rolls in key swing states, aiming to tilt the 2024 election in favor of former President Donald Trump.
These previously unreported plans are the work of a group named Ziklag, a little-known charity whose donors have included some of the wealthiest conservative Christian families in the nation, including the billionaire Uihlein family, who made a fortune in office supplies, the Greens, who run Hobby Lobby, and the Wallers, who own the Jockey apparel corporation. Recipients of Ziklagās largesse include Alliance Defending Freedom, which is the Christian legal group that led the overturning of Roe v. Wade, plus the national pro-Trump group Turning Point USA and a constellation of right-of-center advocacy groups.
ProPublica and Documented obtained thousands of Ziklagās members-only email newsletters, internal videos, strategy documents and fundraising pitches, none of which has been previously made public. They reveal the groupās 2024 plans and its long-term goal to underpin every major sphere of influence in American society with Christianity. In the Bible, the city of Ziklag was where David and his soldiers found refuge during their war with King Saul.
āWe are in a spiritual battle and locked in a terrible conflict with the powers of darkness,ā says a strategy document that lays out Ziklagās 30-year vision to āredirect the trajectory of American culture toward Christ by bringing back Biblical structure, order and truth to our Nation.ā
Ziklagās 2024 agenda reads like the work of a political organization. It plans to pour money into mobilizing voters in Arizona who are āsympathetic to Republicansā in order to secure ā10,640 additional unique votesā ā almost the exact margin of President Joe Bidenās win there in 2020. The group also intends to use controversial AI software to enable mass challenges to the eligibility of hundreds of thousands of voters in competitive states.
In a recording of a 2023 internal strategy discussion, a Ziklag official stressed that the objective was the same in other swing states. āThe goal is to win,ā the official said. āIf 75,000 people wins the White House, then how do we get 150,000 people so we make sure we win?ā
According to the Ziklag files, the group has divided its 2024 activities into three different operations targeting voters in battleground states: Checkmate, focused on funding so-called election integrity groups; Steeplechase, concentrated on using churches and pastors to get out the vote; and Watchtower, aimed at galvanizing voters around the issues of āparental rightsā and opposition to transgender rights and policies supporting health care for trans people.
In a member briefing video, one of Ziklagās spiritual advisers outlined a plan to ādeliver swing statesā by using an anti-transgender message to motivate conservative voters who are exhausted with Trump.
But Ziklag is not a political organization: It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt charity, the same legal designation as the United Way or Boys and Girls Club. Such organizations do not have to publicly disclose their funders, and donations are tax deductible. In exchange, they are āabsolutely prohibited from directly or indirectly participating in, or intervening in, any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for elective public office,āĀ according to the IRS.
ProPublica and Documented presented the findings of their investigation to six nonpartisan lawyers and legal experts. All expressed concern that Ziklag was testing or violating the law.
The reporting by ProPublica and Documented ācasts serious doubt on this organizationās status as a 501(c)(3) organization,ā said Roger Colinvaux, a professor at Catholic Universityās Columbus School of Law.
āI think itās across the line without a question,ā said Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer, a University of Notre Dame law professor.
Ziklag officials did not respond to a detailed list of questions. Martin Nussbaum, an attorney who said he was the groupās general counsel, said in a written response that āsome of the statements in your email are correct. Others are not,ā but he then did not respond to a request to specify what was erroneous. The group is seeking to āalignā the culture āwith Biblical values and the American constitution, and that they will serve the common good,ā he wrote. Using theĀ official tax nameĀ for Ziklag, he wrote that āUSATransForm does not endorse candidates for public office.ā He declined to comment on the groupās members.
There are no bright lines or magic words that the IRS might look for when it investigates a charitable organization for engaging in political intervention, said Mayer. Instead, the agency examines the facts and circumstances of a groupās activities and makes a conclusion about whether the group violated the law.
The biggest risk for charities that intervene in political campaigns, Mayer said, is loss of their tax-exempt status. Donorsā ability to deduct their donations can be a major sell, not to mention it can create āa halo effectā for the group, Mayer added.
āThey may be able to get more money this way,ā he said, adding, āIt boils down to tax evasion at the end of the day.ā
āDominion Over the Seven Mountainsā
Ziklag has largely escaped scrutiny until now. The group describes itself as a āprivate, confidential, invitation-only community of high-net-worth Christian families.ā
According to internal documents, it boasts more than 125 members that include business executives, pastors, media leaders and other prominent conservative Christians. Potential new members, one document says, should have a āconcern for cultureā demonstrated by past donations to faith-based or political causes, as well as a net worth of $25 million or more. None of the donors responded to requests for comment.
Tax records show rapid growth in the groupās finances in recent years. Its annual revenue climbed from $1.3 million in 2018 to $6 million in 2019 and nearly $12 million in 2022, which is the latest filing available.
The groupās spending is not on the scale of major conservative funders such as Miriam Adelson or Barre Seid, the electronics magnate whoĀ gave $1.6 billion to a group led by conservative legal activist Leonard Leo. But its funding and strategy represent one of the clearest links yet between the Christian right and the āelection integrityā movement fueled by Trumpās baseless claims about voting fraud. Even several million dollars funding mass challenges to voters in swing counties can make an impact, legal and election experts say.
Ziklag was the brainchild of a Silicon Valley entrepreneur named Ken Eldred. It emerged from a previous organization founded by Eldred called United In Purpose, which aimed to get more Christians active in the civic arena, according to Bill Dallas, the groupās former director. United In Purpose generated attention in June 2016 when itĀ organized a major meetingĀ between then-candidate Trump and hundreds of evangelical leaders.
After Trump was elected in 2016, Eldred had an idea, according to Dallas. āHe says, āI want all the wealthy Christian people to come together,āā Dallas recalled in an interview. Eldred told Dallas that he wanted to create a donor network like the one created by Charles and David Koch but for Christians. He proposed naming it Davidās Mighty Men, Dallas said. Female members balked. Dallas found the passage in Chronicles that references Davidās soldiers and read that they met in the city of Ziklag, and so they chose the name Ziklag.
The groupās stature grew after Trump took office. Vice President Mike Pence appeared at a Ziklag event, as did former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson, Sen. Ted Cruz, then-Rep. Mark Meadows and other members of Congress. In its private newsletter, Ziklag claims that a coalition of groups it assembled played āa hugely significant role in the selection, hearings and confirmation processā of Amy Coney Barrett for a Supreme Court seat in late 2020.
Confidential donor networks regularly invest hundreds of millions of dollars into political and charitable groups, from the liberal Democracy Alliance to the Koch-affiliated Stand Together organization on the right. But unlike Ziklag, neither of those organizations is legally set up as a true charity.
Ziklag appears to be the first coordinated effort to get wealthy donors to fund an overtly Christian nationalist agenda, according to historians, legal experts and other people familiar with the group. āIt shows that this idea isnāt being dismissed as fringe in the way that it might have been in the past,ā said Mary Ziegler, a legal historian and University of California, Davis law professor.
The Christian nationalism movement has a variety of aims and tenets,Ā according to the Public Religion Research Institute: that the U.S. government āshould declare America a Christian nationā; that American laws āshould be based on Christian valuesā; that the U.S. will cease to exist as a nation if it āmoves away from our Christian foundationsā; that being Christian is essential to being American; and that God has ācalled Christians to exercise dominion over all areas of American society.ā
One theology promoted by Christian nationalist leaders is the Seven Mountain Mandate. Each mountain represents a major industry or a sphere of public life: arts and media, business, church, education, family, government, and science and technology. Ziklagās goal, the documents say, is to ātake dominion over the Seven Mountains,ā funding Christian projects or installing devout Christians in leadership positions to reshape each mountain in a godly way.
To address their concerns about education, Ziklagās leaders and allies have focused on the public-school system. In a 2021 Ziklag meeting, Ziklagās education mountain chair, Peter Bohlinger,Ā said that Ziklagās goalĀ āis to take down the education system as we know it today.ā The producers of the film āSound of Freedom,ā featuring Jim Caviezel as an anti-sex-trafficking activist, screened an early cut of the film at a Ziklag conference and asked for funds, according to Dallas.
The Seven Mountains theology signals a break from Christian fundamentalists such as Jerry Falwell Sr. and Pat Robertson. In the 1980s and ā90s, Falwellās Moral Majority focused on working within the democratic process to mobilize evangelical voters and elect politicians with a Christian worldview.
The Seven Mountains theology embraces a different, less democratic approach to gaining power. āIf the Moral Majority is about galvanizing the voters, the Seven Mountains is a revolutionary model: You need to conquer these mountains and let change flow down from the top,ā said Matthew Taylor, a senior scholar at theĀ Institute for Islamic, Christian and Jewish StudiesĀ and an expert on Christian nationalism. āItās an outlined program for Christian supremacy.ā
āThe Amorphous, Tumultuous Wild Westā
The Christian right has had compelling spokespeople and fierce commitment to its causes, whether they were ending abortion rights, allowing prayer in schools or displaying the Ten Commandments outside of public buildings. What the movement has often lacked, its leaders argue, is sufficient funding.
āIf you look at the right, especially the Christian right, there were always complaints about money,ā said legal historian Ziegler. āThereās a perceived gap of āWe arenāt getting the support from big-name, big-dollar donors that we deserve and want and need.āā
Thatās where Ziklag comes in.
Speaking late last year to an invitation-only gathering of Ziklaggers, as members are known, Charlie Kirk, who leads the pro-Trump Turning Point USA organization, named left-leaning philanthropists who were, in his view, funding the destruction of the nation: MacKenzie Scott, ex-wife of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos; billionaire investor and liberal philanthropist George Soros; and the two founders of Google, Larry Page and Sergey Brin.
āWhy are secular people giving more generously than Christians?ā Kirk asked, according to a recording of his remarks. āIt would be a tragedy,ā he added, āif people who hate life, hate our country, hate beauty and hate God wanted it more than us.ā
āZiklag is the place,ā Kirk told the donors. āZiklag is the counter.ā
Similarly, Pence, in a 2021 appearance at a private Ziklag event, praised the group for its role in āchanging lives, and itās advanced the cause, itās advanced the kingdom.ā
A driving force behind Ziklagās efforts is Lance Wallnau, a prominent Christian evangelist and influencer based in Texas who is described by Ziklag as a āSeven Mountains visionary & advisor.ā The fiery preacher is one of the most influential figures on the Christian right, experts say, a bridge between Christian nationalism and Trump. He was one of the earliest evangelical leaders toĀ endorseĀ Trump in 2015 and later published a book titled āGodās Chaos Candidate: Donald J. Trump and the American Unraveling.ā More than 1 million people follow him on Facebook. He doesnāt try to hide his views: āYes, I am a Christian nationalist,ā he said during one of his livestreams in 2021. (Wallnau did not respond to requests for comment.)
Wallnau has remained a Trump ally. He called Trumpās time in office a āspiritual warfare presidencyā and popularized the idea that Trump was a āmodern-day Cyrus,ā referring to the Persian king who defeated the Babylonians and allowed the Jewish people to return to Jerusalem. Wallnau has visited with Trump at the White House and Trump Tower; last November, heĀ livestreamed from a black-tie gala at Mar-a-LagoĀ where Trump spoke.
Wallnau did not come up with the notion that Christians should try to take control of key areas of American society. But he improved on the idea by introducing the concept of the seven mountains and urged Christians to set about conquering them. The concept caught on, said Taylor, because it empowered Christians with a sense of purpose in every sphere of life.
As a preacher in the independent charismatic tradition, a fast-growing offshoot of Pentecostalism that is unaffiliated with any major denomination, Wallnau and his acolytes believe that God speaks to and through modern-day apostles and prophets āĀ a version of Christianity that Taylor, in his forthcoming book āThe Violent Take It By Force,ā describes as āthe amorphous, tumultuous Wild West of the modern church.ā Wallnau and his ideas lingered at the fringes of American Christianity for years, until the boost from the Trump presidency.
The Ziklag files detail not only what Christians should do to conquer all seven mountains, but also what their goals will be once theyāve taken the summit. For the government mountain, one key document says that āthe biblical role of government is to promote good and punish evilā and that āthe word of God and prayer play a significant role in policy decisions.ā
For the arts and entertainment mountain, goals include that 80% of the movies produced be rated G or PG āwith a moral story,ā and that many people who work in the industry āoperate under a biblical/moral worldview.ā The education section says that homeschooling should be a āfundamental rightā and the government āmust not favor one form of education over another.ā
Other internal Ziklag documents voice strong opposition to same-sex marriage and transgender rights. One reads: ātransgender acceptance = Final sign before imminent collapse.ā
Heading into the 2024 election year, Ziklag executive director Drew Hiss warned members in an internal video that ālooming above and beyond those seven mountains is this evil force thatās been manifesting itself.ā He described it as āa controlling, evil, diabolical presence, really, with tyranny in mind.ā That presence was concentrated in the government mountain, he said. If Ziklaggers wanted to save their country from āthe powers of darkness,ā they needed to focus their energies on that government mountain or else none of their work in any other area would succeed.
āOperation Checkmateā
In the fall of 2023, Wallnau sat in a gray armchair in his TV studio. A large TV screen behind him flashed a single word: āZIKLAG.ā
āYou almost hate to put it out this clearly,ā he said as he detailed Ziklagās electoral strategy, ābecause if somebody else gets ahold of this, theyāll freak out.ā
He was joined on set by Hiss, who had just become the groupās new day-to-day leader. The two men were there to record a special message to Ziklag members that laid out the groupās ambitious plans for the upcoming election year.
The forces arrayed against Christians were many, according to the confidential video. They were locked in a āspiritual battle,ā Hiss said, against Democrats who were a āradical left Marxist force.ā Biden, Wallnau said, was a senile old man and āan empty suit with an agenda thatās written and managed by somebody else.ā
In the files, Ziklag says it plans to give out nearly $12 million to a constellation of groups working on the ground to shift the 2024 electorate in favor of Trump and other Republicans.
A prominent conservative getting money from Ziklag is Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer and Trump ally who joinedĀ the January 2021 phone callĀ when then-President Trump asked Georgiaās secretary of state to āfindā enough votes to flip Georgia in Trumpās favor.
Mitchell now leads a network of āelection integrityā coalitionsĀ in swing states that have spent the last three years advocating for changes to voting rules and how elections are run. According to one internal newsletter, Ziklag was an early funder of Mitchellās post-2020 āelection integrityā activism, which voting-rights experts have criticized for stoking unfounded fears about voter fraud and seeking to unfairly remove people from voting rolls. In 2022,Ā Ziklag donated $600,000 to the Conservative Partnership Institute, which in turn funds Mitchellās election-integrity work. Internal Ziklag documents show that it provided funding to enable Mitchell to set up election integrity infrastructure in Florida, North Carolina and Wisconsin.
Now Mitchell is promoting a tool called EagleAI, which has claimed to use artificial intelligence to automate and speed up the process of challenging ineligible voters. EagleAI is already being used to mount mass challenges to the eligibility of hundreds of thousands of voters in competitive states, and, with Ziklagās help, the group plans to ramp up those efforts.
According to an internal video, Ziklag plans to invest $800,000 in āEagleAIās clean the rolls project,ā which would be one of the largest known donations to the group.
Ziklag lists two key objectives for Operation Checkmate: āSecure 10,640 additional unique votes in Arizona (mirroring the 2020 margin of 10,447 votes), and remove up to one million ineligible registrations and around 280,000 ineligible voters in Arizona, Nevada, Georgia, and Wisconsin.ā
In a recording of an internal Zoom call, Ziklagās Mark Bourgeois stressed the electoral value of targeting Arizona. āI care about Maricopa County,ā Bourgeois said at one point, referring to Arizonaās largest county, which Biden won four years ago. āThatās how we win.ā
For Operation Watchtower, Wallnau explained in a members-only video that transgender policy was a āwedge issueā that could be decisive in turning out voters tired of hearing about Trump.
The left had won the battle over the āhomosexual issue,ā Wallnau said. āBut on transgenderism, thereās a problem and they know it.ā He continued: āTheyāre gonna wanna talk about Trump, Trump, Trump. ⦠Meanwhile, if we talk about āItās not about Trump. Itās about parents and their children, and the state is a threat,āā that could be the ātarget on the forehead of Goliath.ā
The Ziklag files describe tactics the group plans to use around parental rights ā policies that make it easier for parents to control whatās taught in public schools ā to turn out conservative voters. In a fundraising video, the group says it plans to underwrite a āmessaging and data labā focused on parental rights that will supply āwinning messaging to all our partner groups to create unified focus among all on the right.ā The goal, the video says, is to make parental rights āthe difference-maker in the 2024 election.ā
According to Wallnau, Ziklag also plans to fund ballot initiatives in seven key states āĀ Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Montana, Nevada and Ohio ā that take aim at the transgender community by seeking to ban āgenital mutilation.ā The seven states targeted are either presidential battlegrounds or have competitive U.S. Senate races. None of the initiatives is on a state ballot yet.
āPeople that are lethargic about the election or, worse yet, theyāre gonna be all Trump-traumatized with the news cycle ā this issue will get people to come out and vote,ā Wallnau said. āThat ballot initiative can deliver swing states.ā
The last prong of Ziklagās 2024 strategy is Operation Steeplechase, which urges conservative pastors to mobilize their congregants to vote in this yearās election. This project will work in coordination with several prominent conservative groups that support former president Trumpās reelection, such as Turning Point USAās faith-based group, the Faith and Freedom Coalition run by conservative operative Ralph Reed and the America First Policy Institute, one of several groups closely allied with Trump.
Ziklag says in a 2023 internal video that it and its allies will ācoordinate extensive pastor and church outreach through pastor summits, church-focused messaging and events and the creation of pastor resources.ā As preacher and activist John Amanchukwu said at a Ziklag event, āWe need a church thatās willing to do anything and everything to get to the point where we reclaim that which was stolen from us.ā
Six tax experts reviewed the election-related strategy discussions and tactics reported in this story. All of them said the activities tested or ran afoul of the law governing 501(c)(3) charities. The IRS and the Texas attorney general, which would oversee the Southlake, Texas, charity, did not respond to questions.
While not all of its political efforts appeared to be clear-cut violations, the experts said, others may be: The stated plan to mobilize voters āsympathetic to Republicans,ā Ziklag officials openly discussing the goal to win the election, and Wallnauās call to fund ballot initiatives that would ādeliver swing statesā while at the same time voicing explicit criticism of Biden all raised red flags, the experts said.
āI am troubled about a tax-exempt charitable organization thatās set up and its main operation seems to be to get people to win office,ā said Phil Hackney, a professor of law at the University of Pittsburgh and an expert on tax-exempt organizations.
āTheyāre planning an election effort,ā said Marcus Owens, a tax lawyer at Loeb and Loeb and a former director of the IRSā exempt organizations division. āThatās not a 501(c)(3) activity.ā
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