Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Gene Lyons

Mike Johnson and his pious dog and pony show

Speaker of the House Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La., accompanied by Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., walk to the senate side for a meeting with Senate GOP members at the Capitol Washington on Wednesday. (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

Everybody in the South has known somebody like Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson: an amiable, polite, well-dressed religious crackpot who’s either completely out of his mind or pretends to be for career purposes. Sometimes it’s hard to tell.

If you’re an ambitious politician in someplace like Shreveport, Louisiana, there’s no penalty for professing belief in all manner of absurdities calculated to reassure God-intoxicated true believers in backwoods churches that you’re one of them. Everybody understands, especially the people who put up the money.

There’s nothing in the Bible, for example, that compels Johnson to profess disbelief in climate change — although he could probably manufacture something, if challenged. There are, however, plenty of oil and gas wells around Ark-La-Tex, as the area around Shreveport and Texarkana, Arkansas, is called, and the people who own them mean to extract every cubic centimeter from the ground and turn it into cash. The bulk of Johnson’s campaign funds come from the petrochemical industry.

Never mind that finding oil requires hiring geologists — who understand the actual age of the Earth, some 4.5 billion years. That’s far longer than the 6,600 decreed by the Ark Encounter, the Kentucky theme park Johnson once represented, with its life-sized Noah’s Ark exhibit and sea-faring brontosauruses. The congressman has insisted the Bible story represents historical truth.

It’s the same with evolution. As a creationist, does he take his children to physicians who reject biological science as a satanic lie? Even in Shreveport, those can be hard to find. So, it’s all a shuck and jive. Almost everybody who’s been to college — Johnson has two degrees from LSU — understands the rules of the game, and everybody plays along.

In media interviews, Johnson is anything but shy about advertising his piety, recently describing himself to Fox News propagandist Sean Hannity as “a Bible-believing Christian.” To understand his views, he said, “pick up a Bible off your shelf and read it. That’s my worldview.”

A skeptic might observe that Scripture has been interpreted in rather a lot of different ways over the centuries. To Johnson, however, it’s only in Southern Baptist churches in North Louisiana that perfect fealty to God’s word has been achieved. All others are heretics or worse.

Also during his interview with Hannity, however, Johnson displayed a newfound willingness to accept political reality. He told his host gay marriage is a settled issue and there’s no national consensus on abortion. In the past, he has blamed legal abortion for mass shootings — also feminism, no-fault divorce laws and the “sexual revolution.”

“When you break up the nuclear family, when you tell a generation of people that life has no value, no meaning, that it’s expendable,” he told a New York magazine interviewer in 2015, “then you do wind up with school shooters.”

Because to the fundamentalist mind, only two possibilities exist. Either you agree with them on every issue or you’re “of the devil” and an enemy of God. Indeed, Johnson has compared same-sex marriage to the right of “a person to marry his pet.”

Which, come to think of it ...

Who starts purring madly when I climb into the marital bed at night? My wife, or Martin, the orange tabby? Who gets up early to read the newspaper and who stays wedged by my side? Have I chosen the wrong gender and species?

But I digress. Johnson claims firmer views. See, when the U.S. Constitution says, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,” it really means that Protestant fundamentalism rules.

Similarly, when Thomas Jefferson wrote, “It does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are 20 gods or no God,” he really meant to establish a biblical republic based upon a literalist reading of Scripture. That this is absurdly ahistorical matters hardly at all. It’s called “Christian Nationalism,” and millions in the so-called red states have chosen to believe it.

They would have you believe theirs is an embattled faith. According to Johnson, “It is only and always the Christian viewpoint that is getting censored. The fact is, the left is always trying to shut down the voices of the Christians.”

And yet God has elevated a champion. “I believe God has ordained and allowed each one of us to be brought here for this specific moment,” he said during his first speech upon being elected speaker.

And that champion’s main purpose, he has made clear, will be elevating Donald J. Trump, that thrice-married career adulterer, p—y-grabber and adjudicated rapist to the presidency. Johnson was one of the prime movers among GOP congressmen trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election, crafting absurd legal arguments even the Republican Supreme Court rejected out of hand.

Think about it: Trump reinstalled in the White House.

Wouldn’t that be a glorious day for the Lord?

Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co-author of “The Hunting of the President.”

Send letters to letters@suntimes.com

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.