The name of Heather Kull is the only one listed in the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition from Montgomery County. It seems Donald Trump failed to find any other religious leader from that county.

So, if Heather Kull turns out to be a fake entry in the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition, it will mean that Donald Trump failed to achieve his goal of getting an endorsement from a religious leader in every one of Iowa’s 99 counties.

The Donald Trump campaign claims an endorsement from someone named Heather Kull who is supposed to be a “ministry leader” in Montgomery County, Iowa…

…but there is no publicly available record of anyone named Heather Kull living in Montgomery County.

Nobody has ever mentioned any Heather Kull leading a ministry in that county.

So, who is this mysterious Heather Kull, and why is she listed as a member of Trump’s Iowa Faith Leader Coalition?

People talk a lot about Christian Nationalism in the abstract, but the book Donald Trump’s Army of God: Christian Nationalism in the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition, provides an analysis of Christian Nationalism that is grounded in what Christian Nationalists actually say and do.

Forget the theory and theology. This case study is based solely on information about the 317 members of the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition.

You wouldn’t expect Iowa to be the source of stories about Nazi propaganda, murder-suicide, terrorism, money laundering and business fraud, monsters and magic spells, faith healing and guns, ancient prophecies of eternal torture, and a growing Christian Nationalist hunger for global genocidal war. Defying expectations, that is just what the authors found.

The Iowa Faith Leader Coalition is an extremist political organization that violates the law

Learn more about the radical Christian Nationalists who belong to Donald Trump’s Iowa Faith Leader Coalition.