Plainly delighted with Eubanks, he warned her: “You’re going to get the Marjorie Taylor Greene treatment.”Įubanks agreed - “They’re going to try to label me crazy,” she said - and insisted that the Georgia congresswoman is her political hero, in particular for standing against “the radical transgender agenda” by trolling a fellow member of Congress. Such concerns were not top of mind for Voris. Such remarks by the Trump-endorsed Eubanks - who also vowed she’d work to ensure that abortion is illegal in Michigan - may increase the former president’s anxiety that his role in appointing anti-choice judges might dim his 2024 prospects with suburban women voters. If contraception came up for a vote, she insisted, “I would have to side with it should not be legal.” Eubanks then blasted the notion of “consequence-fee sex” saying a birth control ban would encourage people to “wait until marriage, to practice chastity.” All of this could be avoided if we were a truly pro-life nation,” Eubanks said. Voris then drilled down on contraception, specifically, asking Eubanks if she would use her vote in the Michigan statehouse to make it illegal. “You cannot have happiness outside of God’s moral order.” God’s morality is for everybody,” she said. When Voris suggested to Eubanks that her political opponents are likely to paint that as extreme, Eubanks countered: “I don’t see what we believe as extreme at all. “You cannot have a successful society outside of the Christian moral order,” she claimed, insisting that “things like abortion and things like gay marriage are outside the Christian moral order.” Eubanks added: “They lead to chaos and destruction and a culture of death we’ve abandoned the Christian moral order as a nation and we are reaping that destruction.” They’re coming after your birth control.'” He paused a beat before adding with a smile, “Well, you know what… yeah!”Įubanks signaled her agreement, and launched into a fundamentalist diatribe. “They’re saying, ‘They’re coming after your gay marriage next. “We see everything going on with Roe right now - the left becoming completely uncorked losing their minds,” Voris said. Voris and Eubanks engaged in a lengthy discussion of politics and faith. In the interview, posted to Eubank’s campaign Facebook page on Thursday, she insisted she is not a typical politician, “walking in the ways of the wicked,” and said her campaign is a manifestation of “God bringing together a coalition of true conservatives to save this country.” Church Militant is run by Michael Voris, an ex-TV news reporter and formerly gay man who has been criticized as a leader of the “Catholic alt-right.” (Church Militant has strained relations with actual church leaders it was originally known as RealCatholicTV until the Archdiocese of Detroit told Voris he was not “authorized” to use the word Catholic in his branding.)