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Ted Cruz Seeks To Solidify Christian Right Support With Attacks On Planned Parenthood

As we have noted recently, there’s evidence(link is external) that Ted Cruz is consolidating support(link is external) from influential Religious Right leaders. That includes pseudo-historian David Barton(link is external), billionaire fracking brothers Farris and Dan Wilks(link is external), and anti-choice activists(link is external) behind the group Online for Life.

But Cruz is still well back in the polls, and evangelical voters are currently showing a preference for Donald Trump and Ben Carson(link is external), whose support has been rising since the first Republican debate.

Carson is now polling second to Donald Trump(link is external) and ahead of Jeb Bush, with the New York Times reporting this weekend(link is external) his growing support from Religious Right activists. Earlier this month, a Quinnipiac survey of likely Republican caucus-goers in Iowa(link is external) had Carson leading Trump 27-20 among born-again evangelicals; Cruz was in third at 12 percent.

Cruz is hoping to boost his support among evangelicals by leading an effort in Congress this month to cut off funding for Planned Parenthood(link is external). Last month Cruz partnered with GOP political operative and Christian-nation extremist David Lane(link is external) to encourage pastors to preach sermons against Planned Parenthood.

Lane has argued that conservative evangelicals need to unite behind a single candidate to prevent the nomination of an unacceptably establishment figure along the lines of John McCain and Mitt Romney — and he has organized many events for pastors to meet GOP presidential candidates. Cruz backers like Barton and the Wilks brothers are close allies of Lane —  and the Wilks brothers are big funders of Lane’s organizing projects as well as Online for Life.

Lane, who has had kind words for Donald Trump(link is external), has not publicly endorsed a candidate, but he has previously been dismissive of Ben Carson’s candidacy. He told the Washington Post’s Sebastian Payne last year, “Anyone who votes for Ben Carson has no idea what they are doing politically.(link is external) He’s got zero chance of becoming president or getting the Republican nomination.”