When the U.S. Department of Justice released its report on “eradicating anti-Christian bias” last week, the argument it sought to settle had long hardened along familiar fault lines.
For some, the document confirmed what they see as a years-long sidelining of Christian voices in public life. For others, it read less like a civil rights diagnosis and more like a reframing of political grievances as religious persecution.
The Task Force to Eradicate Anti-Christian Bias, established by executive order in February 2025 and chaired by Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, included numerous members of the Cabinet, such as Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Secretary of Education Linda McMahon, and Administrator of the Small Business Administration Kelly Loeffler.
In their 565-page report—with appendices—the task force catalogued a cavalcade of issues it believes show systemic bias against Christians, from abortion policy to gender identity discrimination guidelines to public school lessons about race to vaccination against COVID-19.
Pointing to federal actions, legal interpretations, and enforcement priorities that, in its telling, disproportionately burden Christian individuals and institutions, the task force concluded that “in its zealous pursuit of its preferred policies and constituents, the Biden Administration engaged in anti-Christian bias, seeking to limit Christians’ ability to act in concert with their sincerely held beliefs in their homes, in the workplace, and in the public square.”
Yet critics argue the report rests on a foundational assumption that treats policy disagreement as persecution, taking different political positions in a pluralistic democracy and casting them as evidence of anti-Christian hostility.
“The bulk of the report consists of cherry-picked anecdotes that omit crucial context and legal basis,” Amanda Tyler of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty said in a press release.
Tyler argued the report reflects a selective and politically driven interpretation of events, adding that disputes over religious liberty are “best worked out in the courts, not in partisan political documents.”
Tyler’s critique questioned the scope of religious freedom encompassed in the report as well. “Make no mistake: religious freedom only exists when it is enjoyed by everyone,” she said, warning that focusing narrowly on alleged anti-Christian bias risks ignoring broader patterns of discrimination affecting other groups.
By “advancing certain theological views … not shared by all faiths or even all Christians” and seeking special protections for them, she said, the task force risks perpetuating “the very bias it purports to eradicate.”