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The 2014 Equine Posterior Award: Vote For Your Favorite Right-Wing Extremist

It’s time to cast your vote(link is external) for the winner of People For the American Way’s annual Equine Posterior Achievement Award(link is external), which recognizes the worst of the worst in right-wing extremism.

Our 2014 nominees outdid themselves this year in promoting conspiracy theories, inventing persecution myths and pushing bigotry, and now it’s your turn to decide who wins this year’s coveted award.

Ted Cruz: Last year's EPAA winner(link is external) Ted Cruz didn’t run for office in 2014, but that didn’t stop him from rallying Religious Right voters(link is external). The possible 2016 presidential hopeful spent the year supporting anti-government rancher Cliven Bundy (link is external) and helping to block the nomination of Debo Adegbile(link is external).

Cruz was an outspoken opponent of the proposed amendment to overturn Citizens United, claiming it would “repeal the First Amendment” and “muzzle” pastors(link is external). Also threatening the free speech of pastors, Cruz contended, are equal rights for LGBT people(link is external), to which he is as vehemently opposed(link is external) as ever.

The Benham Brothers: After reporting on HGTV’s plans for a new home improvement reality show starring notorious anti-gay, anti-choice extremist (link is external) David Benham and his brother Jason back in May, the Benham brothers have now taken their tale of "persecution!" throughout the Religious Right speaking circuit.

When HGTV dropped the show (link is external) just hours after our first reporting on their anti-gay activism, including their claims that homosexuality is “destructive(link is external)” and “demonic(link is external), Religious Right leaders from Pat Robertson to Bryan Fischer wasted no time in drumming up a “Christian persecution” narrative (link is external) and declaring the Benhams modern-day martyrs. The Benhams enthusiastically embraced their new role, repeatedly likening themselves to ISIS beheading victims (link is external) and making an appearance at the 2014 Values Voter Summit(link is external).

Gordon Klingenschmitt: What a year for Gordon “Dr. Chaps” Klingenschmitt! Klingenschmitt, whose whole career has been based on a myth about his supposed religious persecution in the military, used his “Pray in Jesus Name” program this year to spread the word that it’s basically child abuse (link is external) for a kid to be raised by gay parents, and that transgender people are just in need of an exorcism (link is external) and a spanking. (Of course, this is a man who once tried to perform an exorcism on President Obama(link is external).)

But in between spouting anti-gay vitriol and denouncing Obamacare(link is external), Klingenschmitt somehow managed to run a campaign for a seat in the Colorado House of Representatives and won(link is external)! Congratulations to Colorado’s new anti-gay, demon hunting state legislator.

Jody Hice: Jody Hice is a Georgia Republican who won a seat in the U.S. House this year despite saying that women should ask their husbands for permission (link is external) before entering politics, that homosexuality “enslaves” people(link is external), and that Muslims shouldn’t have First Amendment rights(link is external). He blamed everything from the Sandy Hook School shooting (link is external) to the Penn State abuse scandal(link is external) on the separation of church and state. He’s a big believer in the power of “blood moons”(link is external) and he thinks our public schools are a lot like Nazi Germany(link is external).

And, again, he will soon be a member of Congress.

Texas State Board of Education: This year, we nominate the Texas State Board of Education for an Equine Posterior Achievement Award for their approval of social studies textbooks(link is external) that were more about the ideological beliefs of the board members than, you know, actual history.

While the approved textbooks were an improvement on the original proposed content, which included blatant denial of climate change and negative stereotypes of Islam as a violent religion(link is external), the final editions emphasize the biblical influence in America’s founding, even going so far as to reference Moses as an influence on the Constitution and the Old Testament as the root of democracy(link is external).

Glenn Beck: This year Glenn Beck assured his viewers(link is external) that his many prophetic visions and predictions would finally, definitely(link is external) come true. It’s hard to imagine where Beck found the time for all his clairvoyance and divine inspiration(link is external), what with everything else he accomplished this year including devising plans to fix the VA(link is external) and destroy ISIS(link is external). But 2014 hasn’t been a banner year for Beck. In March, he was sued for defamation after falsely accusing one of the victims (link is external) injured in the Boston Marathon bombing of being behind the attack. (Unfortunately for Beck, a federal judge recently allowed the lawsuit to move forward(link is external).)

Pat Robertson: This year, EPAA staple Pat Robertson kept up the HIV fear-mongering with his assertion that you can get AIDS from a towel(link is external) -- you may remember last year, when he accused gay people of intentionally spreading HIV by cutting people with special rings(link is external).

There was hardly a news story this year that Robertson didn’t weigh in on, from Michael Brown’s death (link is external) to marijuana legalization(link is external), and even Robin Williams’ suicide(link is external). He spread the word about the demonic threat posed by Ouija boards (link is external) and the serious risk of fighting climate change(link is external). But it wasn’t all doom and gloom for Pat Robertson his show can cure the neck injuries(link is external) and asthma (link is external) of its viewers, after all.

Ben Carson: Right-wing activist and potential presidential candidate Ben Carson kicked off 2014 with a rousing CPAC speech (link is external) denouncing “extra rights” like marriage equality for gay people. Despite repeatedly speaking out against marriage equality and calling it a Marxist plot(link is external), Carson believes that gay rights supporters are trying to inhibit his right to free speech(link is external). Carson also shared his many opinions on the situation in Ferguson, Missouri, blaming Michael Brown’s death on his lack of a father figure(link is external), and accusing protestors of being part of a “me generation” started by women’s libbers(link is external).

Bryan Fischer: Bryan Fischer spent a lot of 2014 being grossed out(link is external), horrified(link is external), and otherwise offended (link is external) by openly gay football player Michael Sam. After that, he said that commemorating Harvey Milk is a lot like honoring Jeffrey Dahmer(link is external), asked Michelle Obama to start an anti-lesbian campaign(link is external), and expressed his preference for sharia law(link is external) and displeasure with Pope Francis(link is external). Perennial EPAA nominee Fischer also chimed in on Ferguson, claiming that Michael Brown was possessed by a homicidal demon(link is external).

Kevin Swanson: Religious Right broadcaster Kevin Swanson took to the airwaves in 2014 to warn his audience about the sinister motives of “The Hunger Games” movies(link is external), the potential for LGBT nondiscrimination laws to protect murderers and rapists(link is external), and the threat of “Antichrist” Presbyterians(link is external). But maybe most memorable were Swanson’s ruminations on popular culture, including his speculation that Beyonce may be possessed by a demonic spirit(link is external), and his claim that the Disney movie “Frozen” is a Satanic movie(link is external) that turns kids gay(link is external).