The phrase that was supposed to unite Trump’s religious base has instead exposed a fault line he cannot cross. When the Religious Liberty Commission convened in February to address antisemitism, it did not resolve the question of whether “Christ is king” has been weaponized against Jews. It revealed that the coalition Trump depends on for November is fracturing along precisely that line.
The Commission’s Focus on the Phrase Exposes a Rift Trump Cannot Paper Over
Trump created the Religious Liberty Commission in May 2025 and handed the chairmanship to Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick. By February 2026, as the Washington Post and timesofisrael.com reported, the commission’s hearing on antisemitism had turned into a referendum on a phrase that has become central to right-wing culture war. A 2025 report by the Rutgers University-affiliated Network Contagion Research Institute found a dramatic increase in “Christ is king” being used as a hate meme targeting Jews between 2021 and 2024, describing this as a disturbing inversion of its original intent.
Commission member Carrie Prejean Boller clashed with witnesses, repeatedly questioning whether anti-Zionism constitutes antisemitism. Seth Dillon, CEO of The Babylon Bee, testified that he regularly hears the phrase followed by contemptuous slurs against Jews and argued context matters. Boller was removed from the commission after the heated hearing, though she disputed Patrick’s authority to remove her without direct instruction from Trump, according to Newsweek.
Pro-Israel Donors and Christian Nationalists Pull in Opposite Directions
Trump’s financial base is built on two pillars that are now at odds. Pro-Israel megadonors like Miriam Adelson have committed massive sums to support Trump and view him as the most pro-Israel president in U.S. history, as the New York Times and Haaretz have reported. Evangelical donors have poured millions into pro-Trump super PACs. Yet an increasingly vocal faction on the right pairs “Christ is king” with anti-Zionist statements and antisemitic tropes. Conservative influencer Candace Owens has commercialized the phrase on branded merchandise while sharing antisemitic conspiracies. Far-right figures like Nick Fuentes have chanted it while promoting rhetoric that targets Jews, as Christianity Today and the Philos Project have documented.
The Phrase’s Sacred History Has Been Inverted
Pope Pius XI established the Feast of Christ the King in 1925 as a response to secularism. The phrase has biblical roots in Jesus’s declaration before Pontius Pilate. But the Rutgers-affiliated study concluded that extremists have exploited this religious expression to justify hatred. Interfaith leaders argue that government endorsement of Christ’s kingship threatens the Establishment Clause by promoting Christianity over other religions. The Interfaith Alliance and other groups sued the commission in February 2026, alleging it violates the Federal Advisory Committee Act by lacking fairly balanced representation, as Bloomberg Law reported.
What This Actually Means
Trump cannot have it both ways. The Religious Liberty Commission’s focus on the phrase did not heal the schism; it put it on display. Pro-Israel donors and traditional Republican sentiment demand distance from antisemitism. Christian nationalist and anti-Zionist factions are growing louder. The commission’s chaos is a preview of the coalition management problem Trump will face through November. He built a coalition that includes both sides. The “Christ is king” controversy proves he cannot hold it together by pretending the conflict does not exist.
Background
What is the Religious Liberty Commission? Trump established it by executive order on May 1, 2025. Chaired by Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, it has held multiple meetings and is expected to produce policy recommendations by summer 2026. A coalition of multifaith organizations sued in February 2026, arguing the commission lacks diverse representation and violates transparency requirements.
Sources
Times of Israel, The Washington Post, Newsweek, Bloomberg Law, Christianity Today