On Tuesday, look for the poll chaplains and the peacekeepers
Opinion
On Tuesday, look for the poll chaplains and the peacekeepers
(RNS) — Their presence has proven effective in the last two elections.
FILE - Christ on the cross is seen at a polling station on the lower level of Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Omaha, Nebraska, on Nov. 3, 2020. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

(RNS) — Voter protection and even safety is increasingly an issue in our upcoming election. A Brennan Center poll of local election officials released on May 1, 2024, said “a vast majority have taken steps since 2020 to protect voters, election workers, and election infrastructure from threats and violence in 2024.” 

The threats are real. Members of the former President Trump’s campaign team in Hillsdale, Michigan, asked attendees at an America First Republicans meeting to be “troops in the trenches” and “poll challengers” in this year’s election. In Sanford, North Carolina, the local Republican Party chair trained poll watchers to be “assertive” and “aggressive.

Meanwhile, militant far-right Christian nationalist groups that support Trump, like the New Apostolic Reformation network, say “demons” have taken over Democrats and Kamala Harris, whom they compare to the evil woman Jezebel in the Bible. Their doctrine is Christian Dominion, proposing a 7 Mountain mandate to take over religion, family, government, education, business, media, arts and entertainment. And they also have a strategy for the polls on election day — boasting at their rallies that they have a plan to install their people “like Trojan Horses” who will infiltrate voting sites disguised as poll workers or monitors. They are calling cheering crowds in swing states to be “God appointed warriors” to do whatever is necessary to win this election. But if and when their Trojan horse warriors show up they might be surprised to find faithful “poll chaplains” who are also trained to be “peacemakers,” the ones Jesus calls “the children of God” in the Gospel of Matthew 5:8.


We, and likeminded clergy, have created Faiths United to Save Democracy, a nonpartisan multi-racial, multi-faith and multi-generational campaign that is bringing together white and Black pastors, rabbis, imams and people of faith ordained or not. So far, we have trained over 900 poll chaplains and peacekeepers in battleground states such as Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Ohio, Texas, Florida  and Alabama, and we’ve focused on placing them in poor and minority neighborhoods where threats of intimidation and violence at polling places are greatest. 

We train poll chaplains and peacekeepers to be ready for any voter process or procedural issues that might come up, or help voters who run into problems while trying to vote. We also train them to connect with other election protection groups like Common Cause, NAACP and League of Women Voters to develop camaraderie among those assisting voters. And, especially now, poll chaplains and peacekeepers are trained in detail for how they might respond to any threats and dangers of violence with practical steps and actions that can be taken to shift from negative to positive energy. How to make eye contact, how to position yourself, how to be firm but not confrontational, how to enter into calming conversations, how to respond to conflict if it occurs, are all part of our training.

Poll chaplains and peacekeepers have proven effective in the last two elections. Bishop Claude Alexander reported to us that when an armed white man stood alongside Black voters waiting in line in Charlottesville, North Carolina, during the 2020 election, he in his robe and other clergy in collars intervened and led the men away. The Rev. Donta McGilvery in Phoenix, Arizona, told us how their poll chaplains created a dialogue about faith and voting when a group of shouting white voters demanded of other voters “did you vote Christian or not?” When a pickup truck with a Confederate flag filled with armed white men parked outside a Detroit elementary school that served as a polling place, the Rev. Steve Bland Jr. described to us how Black men in clergy collars surrounded the truck and persuaded the intimidators to leave. The pattern of armed men at polling places being confronted by unarmed men with collars seems to be a recurring one. Fearful voters have reported to us they felt safer when they learned that clergy would be at polling places — which is now being planned by many local groups around the country.

A Scripture that inspires many faiths is the foundation for this campaign. It comes from the first chapter of the first book of the Bible, Genesis 1:26, which teaches us all humankind — all of us — are created in the image and likeness of God, imago dei. We start all our training with that iconic biblical text. For us, voter protection is not just political, but theological, to respect the dignity of every person who comes to vote. We believe any suppression or subversion of any person’s vote, because of the color of their skin, their economic status, their political views or any other reason, is nothing less than an assault on imago dei, the image of God. And that is our call to action. We can’t control polls, but we can decide to come help and serve at polling places, which could become scary and dangerous places for this election.

You can still sign up in your state by going to www.turnoutsunday.com to help ensure free, fair and safe elections in this critical moment in our nation’s history.

(The Rev. Jim Wallis is director of Georgetown University’s Center on Faith and Justice and the author, most recently, of “The False White Gospel: Rejecting Christian Nationalism, Reclaiming True Faith, and Refounding Democracy” and co-coordinator along with Dr. Barbara Williams-Skinner of Faiths United to Save Democracy. Skinner is CEO and co-founder of the Skinner Leadership Institute and co-convener of the National African American Clergy Network. The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily reflect those of Religion News Service.)


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