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Thomas Frank Easy Chair Team America Harpers

Nonprofit bourgeois organization

Quango for National Policy
CNP logo.jpg
Abbreviation CNP
Formation 1981
Blazon Public policy remember tank
Website cfnp.org

The Council for National Policy (CNP) is an umbrella organisation and networking group for conservative and Republican activists in the United States. It was launched in 1981 during the Reagan administration by Tim LaHaye and other right-wing conservative Christians, to "bring more than focus and force to bourgeois advancement".[1] [2] [3] The membership list for September 2020 was later leaked, showing that members included prominent Republicans and conservatives, wealthy entrepreneurs, and media proprietors, together with anti-abortion and anti-Islamic extremists. Members are instructed not to reveal their membership, or even name the group.[4]

The CNP has been described by The New York Times as "a footling-known social club of a few hundred of the virtually powerful conservatives in the state", who meet three times yearly behind closed doors at undisclosed locations for a confidential conference.[five] The Nation has chosen it a secretive organisation that "networks wealthy right-wing donors together with elevation bourgeois operatives to program long-term movement strategy".[6] The organization has been described by Anne Nelson as a "pluto-theocracy" (plutocracy/theocracy).[seven]

Meetings and membership [edit]

Marc Ambinder of ABC News said virtually the council: "The grouping wants to be the conservative version of the Council on Foreign Relations." The CNP was founded in 1981. Amongst its founding members were: Tim LaHaye, then the caput of the Moral Majority, Nelson Bunker Hunt, T. Cullen Davis, William Cies, Howard Phillips,[8] and Paul Weyrich.[9]

Members of the CNP accept included: General John Singlaub, aircraft magnate J. Peter Grace, Edwin J. Feulner Jr of the Heritage Foundation, Rev. Pat Robertson of the Christian Dissemination Network, Jerry Falwell, U.S. Senator Trent Lott, Southern Baptist Convention activists and retired Texas Court of Appeals Approximate Paul Pressler, lawyer and paleoconservative activist Michael Peroutka,[ten] Reverend Paige Patterson,[eleven] Senator Don Nickles, one-time United States Attorneys General Edwin Meese and John Ashcroft, gun-rights activist Larry Pratt, Colonel Oliver Northward, Steve Bannon, Kellyanne Conway, philanthropist Elsa Prince (mother of Blackwater founder and sometime CEO Erik Prince and Trump Assistants Secretarial assistant of Educational activity Betsy Devos), Leonard Leo, and [1] Virginia Thomas (wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas).[one] Former California Country Assemblyman Steve Baldwin was CNP's executive managing director from 2000 to 2008.[12]

Membership is past invitation only. The organization's membership listing is considered "strictly confidential". Guests may attend "just with the unanimous approval of the executive committee." Members are instructed not to refer to the organization by name to protect against leaks.[5] The New York Times political writer David D. Kirkpatrick suggested that the system's secrecy since its founding was intended to insulate it "from what its members considered the liberal bias of the news media."[2]

CNP's meetings are closed to the general public, reportedly to let for a costless-flowing exchange of ideas. The group meets 3 times per year.[thirteen] This policy is said to exist similar to the long-held policy of the Council on Foreign Relations, to which the CNP has at times been compared. CNP'due south 501(c)(3) tax-exempt condition was revoked by the IRS in 1992 on grounds that it was non an organization run for the public benefit. The grouping successfully challenged this ruling in federal courtroom. A quarterly journal aimed at educating the public, promised in the wake of this incident, has not essentially materialized. The arrangement has a website that contains many policy speeches from past gatherings (covering the years from 2013 upwardly to the present).[14]

While those involved in the organization are almost entirely from the United States, their organizations and influence comprehend the globe, both religiously and politically. Members include corporate executives,[15] legislators[15] quondam high ranking government officers,[15] leaders of 'think tanks'[fifteen] dedicated to molding society and those whom many view every bit "Christian leadership".[fifteen]

In May 2016, the Southern Poverty Police force Center released a leaked copy of the membership directory for 2014.[16] [17]

A membership list for September 2020, leaked a year afterward, revealed that members, who could attend meetings together, included elite Republicans, wealthy entrepreneurs, media proprietors and pillars of the U.s.a. conservative move, and anti-abortion and anti-Islamic extremists. It was reported that members of the secretive CNP are instructed not to reveal their affiliation or even name the group.[4] [18]

The leaked September 2020 listing of members included:[4]

  • Jerome Corsi, author and conspiracy theorist, fellow member of CNP's board of governors
  • Brad Dacus, founder and president of the Pacific Justice Found†
  • Michael Farris, president and CEO of the Alliance Defending Freedom† (ADF)
  • Brigitte Gabriel, founder and chairman of Act! for America† (AFA)
  • Frank Gaffney, founder and executive chairman of the Center for Security Policy† (CSP)
  • James and Amapola Hansberger, co-founders of Legal Immigrants for America† (Lifa)
  • Margaret H Hartshorn, chair of the board of Heartbeat International
  • Charlie Kirk, co-founder and executive director of Turning Point Us.[xix] He is the William F. Buckley Jr. Quango Member of the Council[20] [21] and a spokesperson for CNP Activity (est. 1987), the political arm of the CNP.[twenty] [22]
  • Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council†
  • Mathew Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel†
  • Tim Wildmon, president of the American Family Association†

†: on the list of organizations designated by the Southern Poverty Law Heart equally detest groups

Conferences and political plans [edit]

Leading members of the CNP voted in a meeting at the G America Hotel in Salt Lake City, on September 29, 2007, to consider launching a third party candidate if the 2008 Republican nominee were pro-choice. (The candidacy of erstwhile New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who held liberal opinions on social issues such equally ballgame, gay rights and gun buying, had disturbed the Christian right.) The CNP'due south statement read, "If the Republican Party nominates a pro-abortion candidate, we will consider running a third-party candidate." Attending the meeting were notable social conservatives, including James Dobson, Richard Viguerie, Tony Perkins and Morton Blackwell.[23] [24]

CNP has membership links to the Committee for the Gratuitous World, whose many other members included, amidst others, some members of the Unification Church building of the United States, some Republican Party leaders, and counter-revolutionaries in Latin America, particularly during the 1980s.[25] Midge Decter served as Executive Director of its committee.[26] [27] [28] Other members included Jeane Kirkpatrick, Leszek Kołakowski, Irving Kristol, Melvin J. Lasky, Seymour Yard. Lipset, Donald Rumsfeld, Tom Stoppard and George Will. Eugene V. Rostow, then serving equally Manager of the Arms Control and Disarmament Bureau under President Ronald Reagan, was a speaker at a CFW event on Poland.[29]

CNP'due south membership also overlaps significantly with that of the Arlington Group, a coalition of conservative Christian organizations which spearheaded ballot initiatives banning gay union in thirty-two states in the 2000s;[thirty] [31] [32] and with the second, 3rd and fourth iterations of the Committee on the Present Danger.[ citation needed ]

In his June 1997 speech communication at a CNP coming together in Montreal, Quebec, then president of the National Citizens' Coalition, Stephen Harper—who later served as the prime minister of Canada from 2006 to 2015—said that the American "conservative motility, is a low-cal and an inspiration to people [of Canada] and across the world."[33]

In 1999, a speech given to the CNP by Republican candidate George West. Bush is credited with helping him gain the support of conservatives in his successful bid for the United States Presidency in 2000. The content of the spoken communication has never been released by the CNP or by Bush.[34]

In Feb 2007, the organization planned to be involved in the 2008 presidential election campaign and actively sought candidate that would correspond their views. U.Southward. Vice President Dick Cheney[35] and erstwhile Massachusetts governor Hand Romney[36] spoke at a four-day conference that the council held in Common salt Lake City, Utah, during the last week of September 2007. The Quango for National Policy scheduled a briefing in belatedly October 2007; other than Giuliani, near Republican presidential candidates pledged to appear.[37]

On May 18, 2018 House Bulk Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-CA, gave a speech to the Council for National Policy in which he asserted that the American political climate was "increasingly belittling Christian conservatives for their behavior" and forcing Christians "'out of the public foursquare'".[38]

On August 21, 2020, President Trump attended a CNP meeting where he gave a speech.[39]

In a October 14, 2020, Washington Post commodity, which described the CNP equally a "little-known group that has served for decades as a hub for a nationwide network of conservative activists and the donors who support them", one of the attendees of the August 2020 meeting in Arlington, warned of plans by Democrats to "steal this election". He said that, "if they get away with that, what happens? Democracy is finished because they usher in totalitarianism."[one]

Leadership [edit]

CNP was founded in 1981 by Southern Baptist pastor Tim LaHaye, author of The Boxing for the Mind (1980) and the Left Behind series of books. Other early participants have included W. Cleon Skousen, a theologian inside The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-mean solar day Saints and founder of the Freemen Institute; Paul Weyrich; Phyllis Schlafly; Robert Grant; Howard Phillips, a former Republican affiliated with the Constitution Party; Richard Viguerie, the direct-post specialist; and Morton Blackwell, a Louisiana and Virginia activist who is considered a specialist on the rules of the Republican Political party.[twoscore] [41] [42]

The council's offset executive director was Woody Jenkins; later on, Morton Blackwell and Bob Reccord served in this office. Arrangement presidents have included Nelson Bunker Hunt of Dallas, Amway co-founder Richard DeVos of Michigan, Pat Robertson of Virginia Beach, retired Approximate Paul Pressler of Houston, former Reagan Chiffonier secretaries Edwin Meese and Donald Hodel, onetime Reagan advisor and President of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute Kenneth Cribb, Family Enquiry Council president Tony Perkins, and electric current President (every bit of 2014) Stuart Epperson, founder of the Salem Media Group.[42] [43] [44] [45]

Alleged potential legal violations [edit]

On October 14, 2020, The Washington Post reported that it had obtained videos recorded by CNP of several meetings in February and August 2020 whose overtly partisan, political nature raised "potential issues of compliance with election laws and charity rules."[1]

Literature [edit]

  • Nelson, Anne (2019). Shadow Network: Media, Coin, and the Undercover Hub of the Radical Right. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN978-ane-63557-319-0. OCLC 1126560275.

Encounter besides [edit]

  • Joe Aguillard
  • Gary Aldrich
  • Robert Alt
  • John K. Andrews, Jr.
  • Larry P. Arnn
  • Cleta Mitchell
  • Lowell C. Smith
  • 2020 presidential election and the "Pence Carte" scheme
  • Ginni Thomas' efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e O'Harrow Jr., Robert (Oct xiv, 2020). "Videos testify closed-door sessions of leading bourgeois activists: 'Be not agape of the accusations that you're a voter suppressor'". The Washington Mail . Retrieved March 2, 2021.
  2. ^ a b Kirkpatrick, David D. (Feb 24, 2007). "Christian Right Labors to Find '08 Candidate". The New York Times. Washington, DC. Retrieved March 2, 2021.
  3. ^ Nelson, Anne (2019). "Shadow Network". Bloomsbury Publishing . Retrieved 2019-eleven-09 .
  4. ^ a b c Wilson, Jason (thirty September 2021). "Superlative Republicans rub shoulders with extremists in secretive rightwing group, leak reveals". The Guardian.
  5. ^ a b Kirkpatrick, David K. (August 28, 2004). "The 2004 Campaign: The Conservative; Lodge of the Most Powerful Gathers in Strictest Privacy". The New York Times . Retrieved March 2, 2021.
  6. ^ Max Blumenthal, Secretive Right-Wing Group Vetted Palin thenation.com 09/01/2008
  7. ^ Nelson, Anne (2019). Shadow Network. Bloomsbury.
  8. ^ "A History of Accomplishment". The Bourgeois Caucus. Retrieved five January 2019.
  9. ^ Inside the Council for National Policy ABC News May eight, 2008
  10. ^ Kirkpatrick, David D. (August 28, 2004). "The 2004 Campaign: The Conservatives; Club of the Virtually Powerful Gathers in Strictest Privacy". The New York Times.
  11. ^ The War for Thee University, page 191. Texas Monthly. Nov 1991. Retrieved Feb 16, 2011.
  12. ^ "Nigh Steve Baldwin". Archived from the original on 2016-03-06.
  13. ^ Gibbs, Nancy; Duffy, Michael (Oct 4, 2007). "Still Looking for Mr. Right". Fourth dimension. Archived from the original on October 10, 2007.
  14. ^ "Council for National Policy - Policy speeches".
  15. ^ a b c d e Adam Clymer, "Conservatives Gather in Umbrella Quango for a National Policy", The New York Times, May twenty, 1981
  16. ^ "The Council for National Policy: Behind the Curtain | Southern Poverty Law Center". Retrieved May 19, 2020.
  17. ^ Berlet, Flake (2018). Trumping democracy in the United States : from Ronald Reagan to alt-right. London: Routledge. ISBN978-one-315-43839-nine. OCLC 1129904664.
  18. ^ Leonard, Kimberly; Relman, Eliza; Beckler, Hannah (24 September 2021). "One of the most secretive and powerful groups in GOP politics just had its cellphone numbers leaked. Here's what its members said virtually Trump 2024 when we started calling". Business Insider.
  19. ^ Wilson, Jason (September 30, 2021). "Superlative Republicans rub shoulders with extremists in secretive rightwing group, leak reveals". The Guardian . Retrieved October 28, 2021.
  20. ^ a b Nelson, Annie (March 24, 2021). "The Shadow Network (Council for National Policy) Is Not Going Away". billmoyers.com . Retrieved October 30, 2021.
  21. ^ Wilson, Jason (September 30, 2021). "Meridian Republicans rub shoulders with extremists in secretive rightwing group, leak reveals". The Guardian . Retrieved October 30, 2021.
  22. ^ "CNP Action, Inc". cfnp.org. Archived from the original on October xx, 2021. Retrieved Oct 30, 2021.
  23. ^ Martin, Jonathan (2007-09-30). "Social conservatives may back 3rd party over Rudy". POLITICO.com . Retrieved 2016-04-30 .
  24. ^ Scherer, Michael (2007-09-30). "Religious right may banish Giuliani". Salon . Retrieved 2016-04-30 .
  25. ^ "Commission for the Free Earth - Political Research Associates - Right Spider web". Rightweb.irc-online.org. 7 January 1989. Retrieved 2010-02-xx .
  26. ^ "Lath of Trustees".
  27. ^ "Midge Decter". National Endowment for the Humanities.
  28. ^ Decter, Midge (2001). An old wife's tale : my seven decades in love and state of war. New York: Regan Books. ISBN978-0-06-039428-viii. OCLC 46421841.
  29. ^ Judith Miller, Artillery control master asserts Reagan is uncertain how to utilise power, The New York Times, January 23, 1982
  30. ^ Ireland, Doug (Summer 2006). "Back to the Futurity: GOP Revives Anti-Gay Union Campaign for '06". The Public Middle Magazine . Retrieved 2020-01-19 – via Political Enquiry Assembly.
  31. ^ "Blackwell is darling of foes of gay marriage". Autonomous Secret. 2006-05-07. Retrieved 2020-01-19 .
  32. ^ Sheryl Gay Stolberg (2005-01-25). "Backers of Gay Marriage Ban Utilise Social Security equally Cudgel". The New York Times . Retrieved 2020-01-19 .
  33. ^ "National Citizens Coalition (NCC) – Harper's presidency was a critical menstruation]". The Harper Index. May 11, 2007. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016.
  34. ^ ABC
  35. ^ Gonzalez, Nathan C. (2007-09-28). "VP Cheney makes quick trip to Utah to address secretive bourgeois policy group". Salt Lake Tribune.
  36. ^ Gibbs, Nancy (2007-10-05). "Nonetheless Looking For Mr. Right". Time. Archived from the original on February 3, 2008.
  37. ^ "Christian Conservatives Vow To Back Third Party Candidate If Giuliani Wins GOP Nomination", Bismarck, SD CBS affiliate, http://www.kxmb.com/News/Nation/167321.asp Archived 2007-12-28 at the Wayback Automobile
  38. ^ "Rep. Kevin McCarthy: 'Troubling' Amazon Removed Christian Legal Group From Its Charity Program". www.dailysignal.com. 24 May 2018. Retrieved 2018-08-02 .
  39. ^ Donald Trump (August 2020), Speech by Donald Trump, Arlington
  40. ^ "Home - Americans United". world wide web.au.org.
  41. ^ "Council for National Policy". www.nndb.com.
  42. ^ a b "Behind closed doors: who is the quango for national policy and what are they up to? And why don't they want y'all to know? - Free Online Library". www.thefreelibrary.com.
  43. ^ "Quango for National Policy (CNP) - I - J - Thousand - Member Biographies". www.seekgod.ca.
  44. ^ "Quango for National Policy Executives & Members". www.seekgod.ca. Archived from the original on 2007-06-20. Retrieved 2007-10-08 .
  45. ^

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • 2014 Membership Directory, redacted and released by the Southern Poverty Law Eye

puglieseancell.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_for_National_Policy