DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Trump Administration Casts Host of Policies Under Biden as Anti-Christian

April 30, 2026
in News
Trump Administration Casts Host of Policies Under Biden as Anti-Christian

The Justice Department on Thursday accused the Biden administration of pushing policies that were unfair to Christians, releasing a report that amounted to the latest rhetorical broadside by the Trump administration over what it calls the “weaponization” of government.

The 197-page document, released by a task force led by the department, sought to portray what President Trump’s advisers contend was anti-Christian bias among those who worked for President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who is Roman Catholic. The report, which refers to decision-making at more than a dozen agencies, comes weeks after Mr. Trump publicly attacked the pope.

“The Biden administration’s policies regularly clashed with a Christian worldview and burdened traditional religious practices,” the report said. “These conflicts frequently arose over abortion, gender ideology, and sexual orientation.”

The document is the Justice Department’s latest effort to argue that it is removing purported political bias from the work of prosecutors. But critics say that the department under Mr. Trump has abandoned its tradition of operating independently from the White House, including by pursuing the president’s rivals, like James B. Comey, the former F.B.I. director, who was indicted this week for posting a photograph last year of seashells on a beach arranged to say “86 47.” The administration argues that the image was a coded threat to kill the president.

Earlier this month, the Justice Department issued a report accusing Biden-era prosecutors of unfairly pursuing anti-abortion activists through the use of a law that makes it a crime to obstruct or intimidate a person seeking abortion services or participating in a religious service at a house of worship. The Trump administration, in turn, has charged dozens of protesters, as well as the former CNN anchor Don Lemon, with violating the same law during a demonstration inside a church in St. Paul, Minn.

In a statement accompanying the release of Thursday’s report, Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, vowed that the department would “continue to expose bad actors who targeted Christians, and work tirelessly to restore religious liberty for all Americans of faith.”

The report sharply criticized a leaked internal memo from 2023 by the F.B.I.’s field office in Richmond, Va., that said far-right extremists could be attracted to Catholic churches or groups.

For decades, the F.B.I. has worked to develop sources at churches, universities and mosques, but the Richmond memo quickly became a talking point on the right. Republicans argued that it showed the bureau was targeting Catholics.

F.B.I. officials quickly withdrew the memo after it was leaked, and an internal investigation found no evidence of “malicious intent.” But the new report argues otherwise. The memo, the report asserts, stemmed from a “misplaced reliance on baseless allegations from the Southern Poverty Law Center and the religious affiliation of a single law enforcement target who happened to identify himself as a ‘radical traditional Catholic.’”

Earlier this month, the Justice Department charged the S.P.L.C. with fraud, accusing the group of paying informants inside hate groups not to fight racism and extremism, but to promote them. The group has denied the charges and called it a politically motivated prosecution.

The new report also criticized a memo issued in 2021 by Attorney General Merrick B. Garland in response to concerns raised by the National School Boards Association about purported threats to local education officials, as parents and teachers grappled with restrictions enacted during the coronavirus pandemic.

Mr. Garland’s memo ordered the creation of a task force of Justice Department prosecutors and F.B.I. investigators to use their “authority and resources to discourage these threats.”

That directive, however, raised significant internal concerns at the F.B.I. and Justice Department. One senior prosecutor warned that “the vast, vast majority of the behavior cited” by the National School Boards Association did not violate federal law.

“Almost all of the language being used is protected by the First Amendment,” the Justice Department lawyer warned shortly before the Garland memo was issued.

While the Trump administration report cites the Garland memo as an example of anti-Christian bias, the document leaves unclear how school board fights over masks, remote learning and safety in public schools constitute a religious issue.

Devlin Barrett covers the Justice Department and the F.B.I. for The Times.

The post Trump Administration Casts Host of Policies Under Biden as Anti-Christian appeared first on New York Times.

The inequality gap we should be talking about: marriage
News

The inequality gap we should be talking about: marriage

by Los Angeles Times
April 30, 2026

The most consequential inequality in America is not the wealth gap or the wage gap. It may not be the ...

Read more
News

U.S. Economy Grew 2% in Early 2026 Even as War in Iran Began to Hit Energy Prices

April 30, 2026
News

How Big Is the American Dream House?

April 30, 2026
News

America shot its arsenal empty in 2 wars. Now it needs Beijing’s permission to reload

April 30, 2026
News

MAGA Is Confused About ‘Animal Farm’

April 30, 2026
Would you like a zombie app? Friendster and Vine are back from the dead.

Would you like a zombie app? Friendster and Vine are back from the dead.

April 30, 2026
How Peter Gold’s WG Pictures Hit a $33K Per-Screen Average Without Spending a Dollar on Ads

How Peter Gold’s WG Pictures Hit a $33K Per-Screen Average Without Spending a Dollar on Ads

April 30, 2026
Big spending on social housing is untenable in this economy

5 takeaways from D.C. Democratic mayoral hopefuls’ first televised debate

April 30, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026