Naomi Morton Trump Christian Hampton Iowa

One thing Naomi Morton hasn’t shared information about is any activity she has engaged with as a genuine “faith leader”, being a member of a board, or directing a church ministry.

What we can see is how much she has ranted about religion and politics online.

That discrepancy seems odd.

There is no publicly available evidence to confirm that Naomi Morton is a “faith leader”.

Naomi Morton is listed in Donald Trump’s Iowa Faith Leader Coalition as a board member in Franklin County, Iowa.

Morton lives in the small town of Hampton, with a population of between 4,000 and 5,000 people.

Morton has repeatedly been cited for spreading misinformation and violent images online. She has promoted Christian nationalist ambitions to take control of the federal government of the United States of America as a tool to promote Christianity over other religions.

Amid the massive fatalities of the COVID-19 pandemic, Morton threatened non-Christians with the message, “If you ain’t got Jesus, all that hand sanitizer and soap ain’t gonna save you anyways!”

The 317 members of the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition each carry a story in their minds about what led them as individuals to proclaim that their religious leadership would be devoted to the political career of Donald Trump. Some of those stories have been shared in public, though many of them remain in the privacy of Coalition members’ own consciences.

Beyond these individual stories, there is a larger narrative about the impact of Christian Nationalism on American politics and the radically transformative plans of Christian Nationalists for the American future.

These stories are told in a new book on the subject. It’s called Donald Trump’s Army of God: Christian Nationalism in the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition.

It sounds crazy, but it’s real. What they intend to do to America is too extreme for us to ignore.

The Iowa Faith Leader Coalition is a radical political organization that violates American law

Let’s learn more about the extremist Christian Nationalists who are members of Donald Trump’s Iowa Faith Leader Coalition.