Jody
Brownlow Hice is a wingnut radio show host, political activist, former senior
pastor of various churches,
president of the Family Research Council’s political action arm. and, from
2015 to 2023, the U.S. representative for Georgia’s 10th congressional
district. He was also a candidate in the 2022 Georgia Secretary of State
election, where he ran against Brad Raffensperger on the grounds that
Raffensperger had refused to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential
election in Georgia after Trump and his allies had made baseless claims of election fraud there. And yes, Hice, who believes that elections are part of a “spiritual
battle”, is a firm promoter of 2020
election fraud conspiracy theories. Despite endorsement from Trump, Hice lost the 2022 secretary of state primary.
Hice’s
rather febrile approach to politics is presumably motivated, in part, by his
view that we are now living in the End Times and the worry that “we have little time” left
on Earth to effect major change. As evidence that the end is near, Hice has cited the appearance of blood moons as harbingers of imminent
cataclysmic “world-changing events”. That said, whereas the destructive
consequences of blood moons are a source of real worries about the status of
the Earth, Hice dismisses climate change as a “propaganda”
tool of the “Radical Environmental Movement” to make people of believe
in an “impending environmental disaster”. His attempts at reasoning do
not tend to observe discernible standards.
Election
fraud conspiracy mongering
Hice was
one of the 139 Republican representatives who
voted to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in Congress. He was also one of 126 members of the House of Representatives to sign an amicus brief in support of Texas v Pennsylvania, the utterly silly and quickly dismissed lawsuit filed at the Supreme Court
to contest the results of the 2020 election – though remember that the
motivation for the signatories was not to win because the claims in the
suit were correct, but to undermine public trust in US democratic
institutions. In June 2021, Hice was one of 21 House Republicans to vote
against a resolution to give the
Congressional Gold Medal to police officers who defended the U.S. Capitol on
January 6.
And in
January 2021, Hice made an unsuccessful objection to the counting of Georgia’s
electoral votes on the grounds (de facto) that the
count was likely to lead to a result he didn’t favor. Indeed, Hice continued to
make false claims about the Georgia results being tainted by mass fraud and Trump
really winning throughout his secretary of state campaigns – which is, of
course, particularly notable since the secretary of state is the person who
oversees Georgia’s elections and who is in charge of voter registration,
certification of results, investigations into alleged election fraud, and a
number of other elections-related issues. There is a (non-comprehensive) list
of baldfaced lies Hice promoted about the 2020 Georgia elections during his
campaign here.
In 2020,
Hice supported Louie Gohmert’s bill to, just as well, ban the
Democratic Party. That would take care of all those
pesky election-related troubles.
Christian
nationalism
A genuine
MAGA cultist, Hice refers to himself as a “constitutional
conservative”, and has a remarkable history of sharing quotes falsely
attributed to various Founding Fathers in order to support that label (there’s
a brief list here). His abject disregard for accuracy
when it comes to issues related to the Constituion is worth keeping in mind
when you look at e.g. his view on the separation of church and state: Hice believes that Christians have been “tricked”
into a “false belief” about such a separation. As Hice sees it, not only
is the church-state separation a myth but something that only leads to
government corruption as the government will miss input from “uprighteous, nice people who
have moral compasses” (presumably, such government corruption has ceased
during the second Trump presidency); indeed, the idea of a separation of church
and state is, according to Hice, the source of all social ills
(including, in particular, gang violence) and all decline Hice –
demonstrably falsely, in fact – believes have befallen America.
And of
course, the separation of church and state is only a myth for Christians. Muslims
are a different matter. The First Amendment doesn’t apply to Muslims. As Hice wrote in his 2012 book A Call to Reclaim America, “[a]lthough
Islam has a religious component, it is much more than a simple religious
ideology. It is a complete geo-political structure and, as such, does not
deserve First Amendment protection”. He predictably neglects to mention
that his description of Islam precisely encapsulates his own view of
Christianity, though maybe that’s fine since he also explicitly believes that what consistutional rights you
have should be determined by whether you belong to a cultural majority; he
also, of course, neglects to consider the rather obvious point that, even if
the description of Islam were correct, the First Amendment is usually
understood as supporting political speech as well.
Muslims, by
the way, don’t only have objectionable political beliefs; as Hice stated in his
book It’s Now or Never, there is also an active Muslim Brotherhood plot to take over the United
States. Hice quoted former U.S. general William G. Boykin as a source for that claim, which
is a slightly less trustworthy source than his own paranoid imagination;
indeed, quoting William Boykin as an authority on anything is in
itself more than sufficient to warrant an entry here. Hice admitted that he couldn’t actually name any of
the people he was afraid were taking over America, but that’s unimportant since
he “usually can’t pronounce Muslim names anyway.”
Of course,
it should also be remembered that Hice has long been involved in the Pulpit
Freedom Sunday project to repeal the Johnson Amendment, which makes churches’
tax exempt status dependent on not endorsing political figures from the
pulpit; Hice, of course, angrily and at length complains that going after churches’ tax status
for violating the amendment – he describes requiring Christians to follow the
law is tantamount to threatening, bullying, and intimidating Christians into
silence – is precisely a violation of the separation of church and state. The
separation of church and state is, in other words, real when Hice needs it to
be.
Hice has
also been a leading supporter of the public display of the Ten Commandments in
government buildings and is the founder of Ten Commandments Georgia, Inc., a group advocating for the
display of the Ten Commandments in every Georgia county courthouse. Courts that
disagree are, in Hice’s view, “judicial terrorists” – how could anyone who disagrees
with him, Jody Hice, not be a terrorist? It is, after all, the duty of
every American – the courts included – to ensure that the government follows
God’s law, not secular laws.
Now, even though
he has a muddy view of the First Amendment, Hice has a very clear view of the
Second Amendment. “It is my belief that any, any, any, any weapon that our
government and law enforcement possesses ought to be allowed for individuals to
possess in this country”, said Hice, something that is worth keeping
in mind when Hice suggests a “Second Amendment response”
to immigration – indeed, he suggested that combatting immigration is “the
reason we have a Second Amendment” in the first place. His reasoning for
his take on the matter is of course the putative need good citizens have to
defend themselves against government overreach. And to deflect an obvious worry
with that maxim, Hice blames mass shootings, such as those that
occurred at Virginia Tech and in Aurora on abortion rights, on the separation
of church and state and the teaching of evolution in public schools (indeed,
Hice thinks that public schools are “totalitarian”
“camps for indoctrination” reminiscent of Nazi Germany and in fact that
the very existence of public schools is a Nazi-like scheme – of course, Hice wants
schools to be camps for totalitarian indoctrination; the complaint is more
precisely that schools currently don’t indoctrinate kids with the kind of
totalitarian ideology he wants). As for the Sandy Hook school shooting, Hice declared that it was the result of “kicking
God out of the public square” with the end of school-organized prayer. The
latter factor was, according to Hice, also the direct cause of the Penn
State child molestation affair, never mind that Sandusky went to school before
organized school prayers were banned, and never mind that prayers apparently
don’t work quite as well for Catholics; details – Hice has never cared much for
those.
Social
issues
Hice is a
staunch opponent of same-sex marriage and cosponsored, in 2015, a resolution to amend the Constitution to ban same-sex marriage. Criticizing advocates for same
sex marriage (prior to Obergefell v Hodges), Hice denied that legal discrimination towards gays
and lesbians existed at all: “If anything”, said Hice, it is the Christian community
that faces government discrimination as a result of a Satanic plot to “chip
away” at “our Christian rights”. He is also opposed to bans on conversion therapy, since by banning such therapy “we are enslaving and
entrapping potentially hundreds of thousands of individuals in a lifestyle that
frankly they are not.”
He has,
moreover, compared homosexuality to alcoholism, drug
addiction, “tendencies to lie” and “tendencies to be violent”,
and gay relationships to incest and bestiality. And a mind
like Hice’s quickly goes into paranoid conspiracy theory land on these issues:
In his 2012 book, for instance, Hice asserted that the gay agenda included a covert plot from zeh
gays to recruit and sodomize children. He also thinks that supporters of abortion rights are
worse than Adolf Hitler.
And keep in
mind that, although he is out of Congress, he remains in a position to do
significant harm as president of FRC’s political action arm. There is a decent Jody Hice
resource here.
Diagnosis:
No, he hasn’t gone away at all. And he remains as flamboyantly delusional,
paranoid and fanatic as ever. No one is safe.