America Has Quietly Been Changing Before Our Eyes. They’re Behind Much of It. They’re Just Getting Started.

America Has Quietly Been Changing Before Our Eyes. They’re Behind Much of It. They’re Just Getting Started.

If you heard about a well-funded right-wing group with a detailed plan to achieve conservative policy goals, you’d likely think of Project 2025. The Heritage Foundation–backed coalition has crafted an agenda for a second Donald Trump term that encompasses some truly unsettling policy ideas, and the amount of negative attention it’s gotten from Democrats, celebrities, and even Trump himself has led its leaders to retreat from the spotlight.

The thing is, there’s a lesser-known organization that’s already been working for decades to reshape America into a Christian nation—and will keep doing so, regardless of who wins the presidential election in November. It keeps racking up wins at the Supreme Court: It’s the Alliance Defending Freedom, and it may be the country’s most sinister advocacy group that people have never heard of. The law firm, which is based in Scottsdale, Arizona, says its work “advances the God-given right to live and speak the Truth” and publicly describes itself as “the nation’s largest legal organization committed to protecting religious freedom, free speech, marriage and family, parental rights, and the sanctity of life.” ADF reported more than $100 million in revenue in both 2021 and 2022.

The organization has already made great strides in implementing its far-right agenda through its work on behalf of Christian fundamentalist, anti-LGBTQ+, and anti-abortion plaintiffs. It was integral to the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade in 2022, and now it’s waging war against protections based on sexual orientation and gender identity. The group’s CEO, Kristen Waggoner, has said she believes that the 2015 marriage equality ruling should be overturned as well.

ADF has also faced scrutiny for apparently manufacturing lawsuits involving Christian wedding vendors who object to same-sex marriage; one such case involving a website designer succeeded at the court in 2023 even though the plaintiff, Lorie Smith, had never designed wedding websites and a potential customer who contacted her turned out to be straight. ADF also seems to have invented a group from scratch to be the plaintiff in an ongoing case about an abortion drug. These actions aren’t illegal, but they are deeply unethical. The group is weaponizing the court system to remake laws despite no actual plaintiffs being harmed. (ADF did not respond to Slate’s multiple requests for comment, made by phone and email, nor did it respond to a detailed list of questions.)

By bringing lawsuits before friendly judges, ADF can shape American society to match its vision for the nation. The group’s individual cases may not appear all that connected, but when taken together, they paint a very clear picture. As Gillian Branstetter, a communications strategist at the ACLU, put it, ADF “is using the state to uphold the heterosexual, patriarchal nuclear family as the primary—if not the only—way of living one’s life.”

Here are 10 things we can conclude about ADF’s agenda, based on its lawsuits, model legislation, and comments to the press.

ADF wrote and defended the Mississippi law that the court used to overturn Roe and end the federal right to abortion. Now it’s working on getting courts to agree to federal restrictions on abortion pills and procedures as stepping stones to a national ban.

Cases: Idaho v. United States, Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA (ongoing; Supreme Court sent both cases back to lower courts)

Stated goal of the cases: To maintain state sovereignty and protect women and girls. ADF argued that Idaho’s abortion ban doesn’t violate the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act because a fetus is supposedly a patient under the act, to be treated on equal footing with the pregnant woman even if the fetus isn’t viable. In AHM, the group claims that the Food and Drug Administration recklessly removed safeguards on the abortion drug mifepristone and should no longer allow medications prescribed via telemedicine. (The Supreme Court’s June decisions didn’t touch the merits in either case, and litigation continues.)

Key quote: “We do believe at ADF that the Constitution protects the life of an unborn child and that that is in the 14th Amendment.” —ADF CEO Kristen Waggoner to Politico in 2024

Long-term goal: Since two-thirds of U.S. abortions are done with pills, these lawsuits, if successful, would drastically limit abortion access. And based on some of Waggoner’s public statements, ADF, like many anti-abortion groups, wants the Supreme Court to declare, in the long term, that every fertilized egg has a right to life under the 14th Amendment, a legal theory known as fetal personhood, which would ban abortion nationwide and imperil in vitro fertilization.

Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Getty Images Plus and supremecourt.gov.

Anti-abortion advocates falsely believe that emergency contraceptives and IUDs prevent implantation of fertilized eggs (they don’t), which they claim is abortion (it’s not). In the 2014 Hobby Lobby case, ADF represented the Christian-owned business Conestoga Wood Specialties, whose owners objected to the Affordable Care Act requirement that health insurance cover those birth control methods. The Supreme Court sided with the Christian plaintiffs. ADF also represented Christian colleges in Oklahoma and Pennsylvania in a similar 2016 case.

Yet Waggoner told Politico in March that “ADF has never advocated for limitations on access to contraception”—that’s because the organization views emergency contraceptives and IUDs as “abortion-inducing drugs and devices.” (And ADF is arguing in a different case that states should be able to kick Planned Parenthood out of Medicaid, which would affect birth control access for low-income people.)

Cases: Conestoga Wood Specialties v. Burwell (2014), Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA (ongoing)

Stated goal of the cases: To protect religious exercise under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and end mandated insurance coverage of contraception.

State legislation: In February, an Oklahoma state representative introduced a bill that he admitted was co-written with ADF; the legislation would have defined life as beginning at fertilization and banned emergency contraception, including IUDs prescribed for that purpose. The bill did not get a full chamber vote and has yet to be introduced in other states.

Key quote: “Ella [a prescription morning-after pill]would be considered an abortifacient. … The mechanism of action matters in terms of whether it would qualify as an abortion.” —Waggoner to Politico in 2024

Long-term goal: The lawsuits and model legislation make clear that ADF wants to redefine some birth control as abortion so it can be banned without the group having to overturn 1965’s Griswold v. Connecticut—if abortion is banned and contraception is abortion, then contraception is also threatened. An alternative prong of this strategy is getting the court to agree that the Comstock Act of 1873 bans the mailing of abortion-inducing drugs and devices, a claim ADF makes in Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine. Comstock could be used to prohibit certain forms of birth control too.

Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Getty Images Plus and supremecourt.gov.

In 2015, when the Supreme Court struck down bans on same-sex marriage in Obergefell v. Hodges, it was a devastating loss for religious conservatives. Now that Roe is gone, Obergefell is a top target, since its reasoning relied on similar arguments of substantive due process rights under the 14th Amendment.

Conservatives call these cases “court-invented rights.” And Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in his Dobbs concurrence that the court should overturn Obergefell, Griswold, and Lawrence v. Texas, a 2003 case legalizing same-sex intimacy.

Cases: Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission (2018), 303 Creative v. Elenis (2023), Emilee Carpenter Photography v. James (ongoing)

Stated goal of the cases: To seek religious exemptions to antidiscrimination laws via plaintiffs who are “creative professionals” in the wedding industry. ADF claims that laws banning businesses from discriminating against LGBTQ+ people amount to First Amendment coercion or “compelled speech” because people have to endorse or promote things they oppose on religious grounds.

Key quote: “I think [Obergefell] is wrong and it should be reversed, but I don’t wake up in the morning thinking about how to do that.” —Waggoner to the New Yorker in 2023

Long-term goal: ADF wants to get the court to create a right to object to same-sex marriage. This would undercut Obergefell and clear the way for it to be overturned, allowing states to ban gay marriage or refuse to recognize it. The conservative justices would then be able to claim that same-sex marriage is not part of our history and traditions, akin to the Dobbs test. Justice Samuel Alito noted this in his Obergefell dissent too, quoting a precedent that said “due process” includes only rights that are “deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition.” Alito added: “It is beyond dispute that the right to same-sex marriage is not among those rights.”

ADF’s CEO has said that she doesn’t believe in transgender identity, only gender dysphoria, and that the group’s next priority is fighting “the radical gender-identity ideology infiltrating the law.” Previously, ADF wrote model legislation for the 2016 North Carolina bathroom bill, which was a public-relations disaster; the bill was later repealed. Now ADF is working to establish “parental rights” that would suppress trans rights.

Cases: B.P.J. v. West Virginia, Hecox v. Little, Soule v. Connecticut, Poe v. Labrador, Mead v. Rockford Public School District, five suits against the Biden administration Title IX rule change (all ongoing)

Model legislation: ADF has authored model legislation that would require parental consent for schools teaching “gender ideology,” ban transgender kids from participating in sports, and ban minors from receiving puberty blockers or hormone treatments.

Stated goal of the cases: To ban trans kids from playing school sports (on grounds of “fairness” and “privacy” for cis kids), prevent kids from transitioning with medical care (treatment the organization frames as permanent “sterilization and chemical castration”), and limit even social transition, like teachers honoring kids’ pronouns (a “powerful psychosocial intervention”). Of course, such outright bans restrict the rights of parents who support their children’s choice to transition, but the group appears unconcerned with those rights.

Key quote: “It’s not that the Court is going to say, ‘Gender ideology is bad.’ But I do think the Court could say, ‘Parental rights are fundamental rights.’ ” —Waggoner to the New Yorker in 2023

Long-term goal: These cases suggest that ADF wants to prevent any child from taking puberty blockers or transitioning before age 18. And the “parental rights” the group seeks to create would effectively give parents the authority to demand that their children only ever be around cisgender kids.

Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Getty Images Plus and supremecourt.gov.

ADF suffered a rare loss in 2020, when it asked the court to rule that any employer could fire someone for being trans; the organization represented the religious owner of a Detroit funeral home. Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote a majority opinion saying the Civil Rights Act’s Title VII provisions against sex discrimination include gender identity and sexual orientation. But he suggested that future plaintiffs could try for a religious exemption to the law.

Cases: Bostock v. Clayton County (2020); State of Missouri v. Becerra, State of Florida v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, McComb Children’s Clinic v. Becerra (all ongoing)

Stated goal of the cases: To establish that religious freedom allows employers to refuse to hire trans people, and to undo nondiscrimination provisions of the Affordable Care Act (Section 1557) so medical providers and insurance companies don’t have to perform, refer for, or cover gender-affirming care.

Key quote: “It is no defense to liability under the rule that in a healthcare entity’s medical judgment, removing a healthy organ for ‘gender-transition’ purposes is never medically necessary or beneficial.” —ADF complaint regarding ACA rule change

Long-term goal: If ADF prevails in these cases, the group would succeed in making it financially ruinous to be a trans adult, via medical costs and even more precarious employment prospects. This would also open the door for insurance providers to drop other medical care to which they object, like PrEP for HIV.

Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Getty Images Plus and supremecourt.gov.

Currently, sex and sexual relationships are protected under a right to privacy first established in Griswold regarding birth control, and later reaffirmed by Roe. In another abortion case, 1992’s Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the majority wrote that intimate relationships are a constitutionally protected liberty, and “at the heart of liberty is the right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life.”

Groups like ADF have revolted against this view of sex as a form of self-expression, untethered from procreation. In the 2003 case Lawrence v. Texas, ADF filed a brief defending the state’s ban on gay sodomy. The group argued that the law should stand in part because the court had “long recognized the validity of state regulation of public health and morality.” Texas lost the case, but since then, ADF’s international arm has defended similar anti-LGBTQ+ laws globally that have criminal punishments.

Case: Tingley v. Ferguson (2023)

Stated goal of the case: To fight state censorship. ADF is representing a Christian therapist challenging a Washington state ban on conversion therapy, the practice of trying to convince LGBTQ+ clients that they are straight or cisgender. But as a lawyer for Equal Rights Washington pointed out, the plaintiff isn’t currently violating the law and hasn’t said he plans to. In that way, the case has shades of 303 Creative, in which the web designer didn’t actually create wedding websites. In December, the court declined to take the apparently manufactured Tingley suit. The vote was 6–3, with Justices Thomas, Alito, and Brett Kavanaugh saying they would have heard the case. ADF attorney John Bursch said in a statement that the denial doesn’t end the fight: “There is a circuit split on the issue, and 20 other states and the District of Columbia have similar laws. We urge the Supreme Court to take a similar case when the time comes.”

Key quote: “Major historic faiths including Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, have long taught that the only moral context for sexual relationships is within a heterosexual marriage … the ability to form one’s own natural family has been recognized as one of the greatest joys in life, and one of the most fundamental human rights, across cultures and history. Of course, this can only happen in a heterosexual relationship.” —ADF petition for certiorari in Tingley

Long-term goal: ADF’s public statements make clear that it wants to oppose sexual relationships that are not heterosexual, in the context of marriage, and with the goal of procreation. The group continues to promote the idea that being gay is not an identity for which someone could be discriminated against—that, rather, there are simply people “who experience same-sex attraction.”

In 2021 the court sided with Catholic Social Services against a Philadelphia policy that foster agencies had to work with same-sex couples. ADF then sued the Biden administration, on behalf of a Tennessee organization, for requiring that federally funded adoption agencies work with same-sex couples. (ADF’s client later rejected a Jewish couple in 2022 on grounds of religious freedom; the couple is suing.)

Cases: Holston United Methodist Home v. Becerra (2021); Bates v. Pakseresht, DeGross v. Hunter, Wuoti v. Winters (all ongoing)

Stated goal of the cases: To secure religious exemptions to the nondiscrimination policies of adoption and foster agencies in Oregon, Washington, and Vermont.

Key quote: “If we truly believe that life begins at conception, then this should influence how we think about assisted reproductive technologies like IVF.” —ADF article about Alabama Supreme Court ruling on IVF embryos

Long-term goal: Based on these cases, ADF wants foster and adoption agencies across the country to be able to reject applicants who are gay and give preference to heterosexual Christian couples who will raise children religiously and not support kids who may question their sexuality or gender. Paired with ADF’s views on discarded IVF embryos (see item No. 1), it seems clear the group wants to severely limit the ability of LGBTQ+ people to raise children.

Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Getty Images Plus and supremecourt.gov.

Conservatives recently celebrated a big victory in their ongoing fight against the administrative state: They got the court to overturn Chevron v. NRDC, a 1984 case that held that when Congress says federal agencies should enforce regulations, judges should defer to those expert agencies’ interpretations. Now, when people sue over regulations, judges have much more power to simply overturn them—and ADF has a slew of regulations on sex and gender in its sights.

Case: Amicus brief in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo (2024)

Stated goal of the case: The ADF brief filed in July 2023 argues that agencies are weaponizing both “federal healthcare laws to violate the right to life” and “federal civil rights laws to impose radical gender ideology.” The brief claims that Biden administration actions on abortion violate the Comstock Act and that nondiscrimination rules for trans people force employers to pay for “amputating healthy organs.” (In 2016, before joining ADF, Erin Hawley convened a conference called A Future Without the Administrative State. Hawley, the wife of Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley, is a co-author on the brief.)

Key quote: “Now, the court has wiped away a major roadblock that prevented Americans from holding government officials accountable.” —ADF statement on the Loper Bright decision

Long-term goal: Thanks to the ruling here and in Corner Post, ADF is more likely to prevail in its cases restricting abortion (emergency abortions, abortion pills) and its cases opposing trans rights (Title IX, Section 1557).

Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Getty Images Plus and supremecourt.gov.

ADF was founded in 1993, the year after the court upheld Roe in Planned Parenthood v. Casey and prohibited prayer at school-sponsored events in Lee v. Weisman. Lee upheld the separation of church and state from a ’70s-era ruling, Lemon v. Kurtzman. ADF’s first big win was in a 2014 case in which it pierced the armor of Lemon by getting the court to agree that public prayer was allowed before City Council meetings in Greece, New York. The group further wounded the precedent in a 2017 case requiring Missouri to resurface the playground of a church preschool under a state program. Finally, the court effectively overruled Lemon in a 2022 case involving a high school football coach who wanted to pray on the field after games—but the court didn’t say what legal test would replace it. ADF framed these cases as victories against government censorship and “neutrality” in public benefits.

Cases: Town of Greece v. Galloway (2014), Trinity Lutheran v. Comer (2017), Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue (2020), Kennedy v. Bremerton School District (amicus 2022), Carson v. Makin (amicus 2022)

Stated goal of the cases: To ensure that governments can’t exclude religious schools from public funds and that public employees have a right to private prayer at work. (In actuality, Kennedy, a football coach, led public prayers for his team.)

Key quote: “American citizens don’t give up the right to prayerfully practice their faith during working hours when they accept a job with a public employer.” —ADF statement on Kennedy victory

Long-term goal: With these cases, ADF is pushing the court to write a new legal test regarding what’s left of the separation of church and state. A new test could give the organization an opening to restore mandatory prayer in public schools and siphon more public funds for religious schools, making them more desirable than public ones.

The school district that includes Charlottesville, Virginia, began developing an anti-racist curriculum after white supremacists held a violent rally there in 2017. One parent contacted ADF, and a group is suing over the lesson plans.

Case: Carlos Ibañez v. Albemarle County School Board (ongoing; state court)

Stated goal of the case: To establish parents’ rights to object to anti-racist education or “critical race theory” in schools. (The complaint cites anti-CRT warrior Christopher Rufo.) The complaint argues that schools teaching about racism violate civil rights laws by classifying people as either “perpetually privileged oppressors or perpetually victimized members.” In ADF’s appeal to the state Supreme Court, it cites both the 14th Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.

Key quote: “The district is violating students’ civil rights by treating them differently based on race, and … it has violated parents’ rights by indoctrinating their children, undermining their children’s humanity, and denigrating their deeply held beliefs.” —ADFlegal.org FAQ on the case

Long-term goal: The logical conclusion to draw from this suit is that ADF wants to ban public schools from teaching about race. And given its attacks on other parts of the Civil Rights Act (Title VII in Bostock), there may come a day when ADF tries to ban employers from considering race and gender in hiring decisions—à la the ruling in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard (2023), which essentially ended affirmative action as we know it.

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Publish date : 2024-10-11 04:40:00

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