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| Abbreviation | CCA |
|---|---|
| Founded | 30 April 1987 (38 years ago) (1987-04-30)[2] |
| Founder | Marion Gordon "Pat" Robertson |
| Type | nonprofit |
| 75-2372537 | |
| Legal status | 501(c)(4)[1] |
| Location | |
President | Roberta Combs[3] |
Secretary | Drew McKissick[1] |
Finance director | Neal Meyer[1] |
| Revenue | $766,799[1] (2018) |
| Expenses | $730,918[1] (2018) |
| Employees | 0[1] (2018) |
| Website | cc |
TheChristian Coalition of America (CCA), a501(c)(4) organization, is the successor to the original Christian Coalition created in 1987 by religious broadcaster and formerpresidential candidateMarion Gordon "Pat" Robertson.[4] This USChristianadvocacy group includes members of variousChristian denominations, includingBaptists (50%),mainline Protestants (25%),Roman Catholics (16%), andPentecostals (10% to 12%) among communicants of other churches.[5][6]
On April 30, 1987, the Christian Coalition was incorporated inRichmond, Virginia.[2] The following year, after a well-funded but unsuccessfulcampaign for President,Pat Robertson, a religious broadcaster and political commentator, used the remainder of his campaign resources to jump-start the formation of the Christian Coalition's voter-mobilization effort.Americans for Robertson accumulated a mailing list of several million conservative Christians interested in politics. This mailing provided the basis of the new organization.
The coalition had four original directors: Robertson, his son Gordon Robertson, Dick Weinhold, head of theTexas organization, and,Billy McCormack, pastor of the University Worship Center inShreveport,Louisiana. McCormack had headed the Louisiana division ofAmericans for Robertson in 1988[7] and was also the vice president of the coalition.[8]
After its founding, the Christian Coalition applied to become atax-exemptcharitable organization with theInternal Revenue Service.[9] Forty-nine state chapters formed as independent corporations within their states, including the Christian Coalition of Texas. A handful, including the Christian Coalition of Texas, successfully obtained tax-exempt status associal-welfare organizations. After ten years, the Internal Revenue Service declined the Christian Coalition's application for charitable status because it engaged in political activities.[9] In response, the Christian Coalition of Texas was renamed the Christian Coalition of America, and the organization relocated in order to work nationwide.[9]
In 1990, the national Christian Coalition, Inc., headquartered inChesapeake, Virginia, began producing non-partisan voter guides which it distributed to conservative Christian churches. Complaints that the voter guides were partisan led to the denial by the IRS of the Christian Coalition, Inc.'s tax-exempt status in 1999.[10] Later that same year, the coalition prevailed in its five-year defense of a lawsuit brought by theFederal Election Commission.[11]
Ralph Reed, an Emory University Ph.D. candidate, whom Robertson had met when the younger man was working as a waiter at an inaugural dinner for George H. W. Bush in January 1989, took control of day-to-day operations of the coalition in 1989 as its founding executive director. He remained in the post until August 1997 when he left to enterpartisan political consulting, founding his new firm Century Strategies, based near Atlanta, Georgia.[12]
Robertson served as the organization's president from its founding until June 1997, when PresidentReagan's Cabinet SecretaryDonald P. Hodel was named president of the CCA, and former U.S. RepresentativeRandy Tate (R-WA) was named executive director.[13][14] Upon announcement of Hodel becoming president of the CCA, Robertson expressed a desire to serve the grassroots activists that made up the coalition.[citation needed]
Grover Norquist, Washington insider, president ofAmericans for Tax Reform, and an old Reed ally, said of the appointments: "What you've got is Reagan andGingrich. Hodel is a Reagan Republican and Tate is a Gingrich Republican."[15]
Late in 1997 the CCA was ranked byFortune magazine as the 7th most powerful political organization in America.[16]
After a disagreement with Robertson, Hodel left in January 1999[17] and Tate soon followed. Robertson took over the presidency. Later in 2001 he turned it and the chairmanship over to Roberta Combs, the group's executive vice president and former state chairman of South Carolina, when he officially left the coalition.[18]
In 2000, the coalition moved fromChesapeake, Virginia, to a large office on Capitol Hill inWashington, D.C. Combs is the current president and CEO of the Christian Coalition of America. She is a founding state director and has been the only woman on the board of directors in the history of the Christian Coalition of America. Since moving to the capital, Combs installed members of her family as high-ranking officials in the group, including her daughter Michele Ammons and son-in-law Tracy Ammons. Michele and Tracy Ammons later divorced. Combs fired her former son-in-law Tracy Ammons after her daughter received a judgement against him for alimony and child support. Combs had filed an affidavit on her behalf on Coalition letterhead.[19][20]
Combs canceled a direct-mail fund-raising campaign run by fund-raiserBill Sidebottom of Interact Response Communications aimed at fighting child pornography after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling. The cancellation of the campaign in the middle of its run led to nearly a dozen lawsuits by creditors and the bankruptcy of its fund-raising company. Without a fund-raising company supporting it, the Christian Coalition went into sharp decline financially.[21]
In March 2001, the Christian Coalition of America was sued by its African-American employees, who alleged racial discrimination.[22] The District Court issued an injunction against the Christian Coalition. The case was settled and the African-American plaintiffs received a payment.[23][24][25][26]
In November 2002, Combs downsized the staff and moved the organization's offices from Washington, D.C., to a suburb ofCharleston, South Carolina. The coalition reduced its lobbyists in Washington from a dozen to one.[27] The Christian Coalition was later sued for $1,890 by Reese & Sons Enterprises of Maryland, the moving company it used for transporting its goods to South Carolina, because of failure to pay the wrapping and packing fee. The coalition lost in court in Richmond, Virginia, and finally paid the movers.[25][28][29]
Other reported debts have been $69,729 owed to its longtime law firm, Huff, Poole & Mahoney PC of Virginia Beach, and Global Direct, a fundraising firm in Oklahoma, sued for $87,000 in expenses.[20]From the time Robertson left the group in 2001 until 2006, the coalition's influence greatly declined. Revenue declined from a high of $26.5 million in 1996 to $1.3 million in 2004. The organization's 2004 income tax return showed the Christian Coalition to be technically bankrupt, with debts exceeding assets by more than $2 million.[28]
In 2005, the coalition finally concluded a settlement agreement with theInternal Revenue Service, ending its long-running battle with that agency regarding itstax exempt status.[30] As a result, the IRS has recognized the coalition as a 501(c)(4) tax-exempt organization, the first time in the agency's history that it has granted a letter of exemption to a group that stated in its application that it would distribute voter guides directly in churches. The consent decree enforces limitations on the terminology that may be used in the coalition's voter guides.[30]
In late 2005,The Washington Post reported that the Christian Coalition was unable to pay its office postage bill toPitney Bowes. In addition, it had not paid new lawyers in Virginia Beach; the law firm sued the coalition.[25]
In March 2006, the Christian Coalition of Iowa renamed itself the Iowa Christian Alliance. In splitting from the national group, the Iowa Christian Alliance cited "the current problems facing the Christian Coalition of America". In August 2006, the Christian Coalition of Alabama split from the national group. It later renamed itself Christian Action Alabama.[28][31]
In November 2006, the president-elect of the Christian Coalition of America resigned his post, citing a difference in philosophy over which issues the organization should embrace. ReverendJoel Hunter, currently the senior pastor of the Northland Church inLongwood, Florida, was to assume the presidency in January. However, Hunter stated the coalition's leaders resisted his calls to expand their issue base, saying it would not expand the agenda beyond opposing abortion and same-sex marriage. Hunter also said he wanted to focus on rebuilding the coalition's once powerful grassroots, an appeal he says board members rejected. "After initial willingness to consider these changes, the board of the CCA decided, 'that is fine, but that is not who we are'", Hunter said. Combs continues as the coalition's president.[32]
As of December 31, 2018, the Christian Coalition reported that it had $274,920 of cash on hand, and that it owed $39,367.[1] During 2018, it received $766,799 of contributions, and it had spent $133,000 on management; $7,500 on advertisement and promotion; $162,000 on conferences, conventions, and meetings; $29,500 on affiliate payments; and $133,418 on other expenses.[1]
Thus far, this ecumenical appeal appears to be working. The limited evidence available suggests that the Christian Coalition has attracted members from across denominational lines. Ralph Reed revealed that an internal poll of Christian Coalition members indicated that 25 percent belonged to mainline Protestant churches, 10 to 15 percent attended Pentecostal services, half were Baptists, and 5 to 10 percent attended "other" churches, including the Catholic church (Rozell and Wilcox 1995). More recently, the Christian Coalition has reported that Catholics comprise 16 percent of its total membership.
In 1995, an internal survey of the Christian Coalition found that 16 percent of its 1.7 million members were Catholics.
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