John Birch Society
{{Short description|American right-wing advocacy group}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2018}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2024}}
{{Infobox organization
| image = File:John Birch Society logo.svg
| image_size = 175px
| name = John Birch Society
| abbreviation = JBS
| named_after = John Birch
| formation = {{start date and age|1958|12|9}}
| founder = Robert W. Welch Jr.
| founding_location = Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.
| type = Not-for-profit
| purpose = Political advocacy group{{hlist|
}}
| headquarters = Grand Chute, Wisconsin, U.S.
| leader_title = Chief executive officer
| leader_name = Wayne Morrow
| leader_title2 = President
| leader_name2 = Martin Ohlson
| main_organ =
| subsidiaries = The New American
| affiliations = American Opinion Foundation
FreedomProject Academy
| website = {{official URL}}
}}
The John Birch Society (JBS) is an American right-wing political advocacy group.{{cite book |title=Webster's guide to American history: a chronological, geographical, and biographical survey and compendium |year=1971 |publisher=G. & C. Merriam Co |location=Springfield, Mass. |isbn=978-0877790815 |page=576}} Founded in 1958, it is anti-communist,{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=423–447}}{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p={{page needed|date=September 2023}}}} supports social conservatism,{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=423–447}}{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p={{page needed|date=September 2023}}}} and is associated with ultraconservative, radical right, far-right, right-wing populist, and right-wing libertarian ideas.{{refn|{{cite book |last=Blumenthal |first=Max |title=Republican Gomorrah: inside the movement that shattered the party |publisher=Nation Books |location=New York |year=2010 |page=332 |quote=Skousen's vocal support for the Far-right John Birch Society's claim that Communists controlled President Dwight Eisenhower cost him the support of the corporate backers who had paid for his Red-bashing lecture tours. |isbn=978-1568584171}}{{Citation |first=Roger |last=Eatwell |title=Introduction: The new extreme right challenge |work=Western Democracies and The New Extreme Right challenge |publisher=Routledge |year=2004 |page=7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8Z5wEpDK9d0C&pg=PA7 |isbn=978-1134201570}}
{{Citation |first=Mark |last=Potok |title=The American radical right: The 1990s and beyond |work=Western Democracies and The New Extreme Right challenge |publisher=Routledge |year=2004 |page=43 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8Z5wEpDK9d0C&pg=PA7 |isbn=978-1134201570}}{{Cite news|title=The JFK assassination and a '60s leftist prism Letter from America |first=Richard |last=Bernstein |work=International Herald Tribune |location=Paris |date=May 21, 2007 |page=2}}
{{Cite news|title= Voters Admired N.C. Senator's Independent Streak, Southern Charm |first=Ida Kay |last=Jordan |work=The Virginian-Pilot |location=Norfolk, Va. |date=August 26, 2001|page=J.1}}
{{Cite news|title= The Right Choice for the C.I.A. |first=Douglas |last=Brinkley |work= The New York Times |date=February 10, 1997 |page=A.15}}Webb, Clive. Rabble rousers: the American far right in the civil rights era. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2010 {{ISBN|0820327646}} p. 10}} Originally based in Belmont, Massachusetts, the JBS is now headquartered in Grand Chute, Wisconsin,{{Cite news |author1=Dan Barry |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/26/us/26Land.html |title=Holding Firm Against Plots by Evildoers |work=The New York Times |date=June 25, 2009 |access-date=April 4, 2010}} with local chapters throughout the United States. It owns American Opinion Publishing, Inc., which publishes the magazine The New American,{{cite book |last1=Levine |first1=Deborah |last2=Brenman |first2=Marc |title=When Hate Groups March Down Main Street: Engaging a Community Response |date=15 November 2019 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |page= |isbn=978-1-5381-3266-1 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7pWwDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT13 |via=Google Books |chapter-url-access=limited |language=en |chapter=The Local–Global Context |quote=...there are fierce objections on the extreme right to initiatives related to international collaboration. This attitude is typified by The New American (TNA), a print magazine published by American Opinion Publishing, Inc., a subsidiary of the John Birch Society (JBS), a far-right organization.}} and it is affiliated with an online school called FreedomProject Academy.
The society's founder, businessman Robert W. Welch Jr. (1899–1985), developed an organizational infrastructure of nationwide chapters in December 1958. The society rose quickly in membership and influence, and also became known for Welch's conspiracy theories.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014a|p=15}} His allegation that Republican president Dwight D. Eisenhower was a communist agent was especially controversial.{{Sfn|Stewart|2002|p=425}} In the 1960s, the conservative William F. Buckley Jr. and National Review attempted to shun the JBS to the fringes of the American right.{{cite book|last=Regnery |first=Alfred S.|title=Upstream: The Ascendance of American Conservatism |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Sag0i4r-Ic8C&pg=PA79 |date=2008|publisher=Simon and Schuster|isbn=978-1416522881|page=79}}{{cite book |last=Chapman |first=Roger |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vRY27FkGJAUC&pg=PA58 |title=Culture Wars: An Encyclopedia of Issues, Viewpoints, and Voices |publisher=M.E. Sharpe |year=2010 |isbn=978-0765617613 |pages=58, 91, 148}} JBS membership is kept private but is said to have neared 100,000 in the 1960s and 1970s, declining afterward.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p={{page needed|date=September 2023}}}}
In the 2010s and 2020s, several observers and commentators argued that, while the organization's influence peaked in the 1970s, "Bircherism" and its legacy of conspiracy theories began making a resurgence in the mid-2010s,{{cite news|last1=Savage|first1=John|title=The John Birch Society Is Back |url=https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/07/16/the-john-birch-society-is-alive-and-well-in-the-lone-star-state-215377|access-date=January 4, 2019|work=Politico|date=July 16, 2017}} and had become the dominant strain in the conservative movement.{{cite magazine |last1=Heer|first1=Jeet|author-link1=Jeet Heer |title=Donald Trump's United States of Conspiracy |url=https://newrepublic.com/article/134257/donald-trumps-united-states-conspiracy|access-date=February 11, 2018|magazine=The New Republic|date=June 14, 2016}} In particular, they argued that the JBS and its beliefs shaped the Republican Party,{{cite magazine |last=Dallek |first=Matthew |title=The History That Makes It So Difficult for Republicans to Pick a Speaker of the House |magazine=Time |date=October 20, 2023 |url=https://time.com/6326141/gop-house-speaker-history-john-birch/ |access-date=October 24, 2023}} the Christian right,{{rp|iv, 156–157}} the Trump administration, and the broader conservative movement.
Political positions
{{conservatism US}}
{{libertarianism in the United States sidebar}}
{{Anti-communism|Organisations}}
The John Birch Society from its start opposed collectivism as a "cancer" and by extension communism and big government.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p=11}}{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=428–429, 436, 441–442}} JBS publications referred to the fight against Communism as a spiritual war against the devil.{{cite thesis |last1=Celestini |first1=Carmen |title=God, Country, and Christian Conservatives: The National Association of Manufacturers, the John Birch Society, and the Rise of the Christian Right |date=2018 |type=PhD |publisher=University of Waterloo |url=https://uwspace.uwaterloo.ca/bitstream/handle/10012/13361/Celestini_Carmen.pdf}}{{rp|iv, 156–157}} Allegations that so-called "Insiders" have conspired to control the United States through communism and world government are a recurring theme of JBS publications.{{Sfn|Stewart|2002}} The organization and its founder, Robert W. Welch Jr., promoted Americanism as "the philosophical antithesis of Communism."{{cite thesis | type=PhD | last1=Celestini | first1=Carmen | title=God, Country, and Christian Conservatives: The National Association of Manufacturers, the John Birch Society, and the Rise of the Christian Right | url=https://uwspace.uwaterloo.ca/bitstream/handle/10012/13361/Celestini_Carmen.pdf | date=2018 | publisher=University of Waterloo | pages=10, 114–116, 124–126}} It contended that the United States is a republic, not a democracy, and argued that states' rights should supersede those of the federal government.{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=428–429}} Welch infused constitutionalist and classical liberal principles, in addition to his conspiracy theories, into the JBS's ideology and rhetoric.{{sfn|Verhoeven|2015|pp=3, 56–57, 103}} In 1983, Congressman Larry McDonald, then the society's newly appointed chairman, characterized the JBS as belonging to the Old Right rather than the New Right.{{cite AV media |date=May 1983 |title=Larry McDonald on the New World Order |medium=Television |language=English |url=https://archive.org/details/LarryMcdonaldOnTheNewWorldOrder |time=2:22 |publisher=Crossfire}}
The society opposes "one world government", the United Nations (UN), the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), and other free trade agreements. It argues the U.S. Constitution has been devalued in favor of political and economic globalization. It has cited the existence of the former Security and Prosperity Partnership as evidence of a push towards a North American Union.{{cite web|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071020053033/http://jbs.org/node/5524 |archive-date=October 20, 2007 |title=The North American Union: Conspiracy Theory or Conspiracy Fact? |access-date=September 20, 2011 |first=Brian |last=Farmer |publisher=The John Birch Society |date=September 17, 2007 |url=http://jbs.org/node/5524}} The JBS has sought immigration reduction.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
The JBS opposed the civil rights movement of the 1960s and the Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s. It has campaigned for state nullification.{{cite news |last=Stone |first=Junius |date=October 28, 2021 |title=Local Patriots talk about constitutional convention, nullification |newspaper=Texarkana Gazette |url=https://www.texarkanagazette.com/news/2021/oct/28/local-patriots-talk-about-constitutional/ |access-date=October 29, 2021}}{{Cite web |last=Steinback |first=Robert |date=April 26, 2011 |title=Nullification Advocates Take Show On The Road |url=https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2011/04/26/nullification-advocates-take-show-road |access-date=April 7, 2022 |website=Southern Poverty Law Center |language=en}} It opposes efforts to call an Article V convention to amend the U.S. Constitution,{{cite web |last=H. Neale |first=Thomas |date=November 15, 2017 |title=The Article V Convention to Propose Constitutional Amendments:Current Developments |url=https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R44435.pdf |access-date=April 28, 2021 |website=fas.org |publisher=Congressional Research Service}}{{cite news |last=Wilson |first=Sam |date=February 11, 2021 |title=Fiery Constitutional Debate Splits Senate Republicans |newspaper=Independent Record |url=https://helenair.com/news/state-and-regional/govt-and-politics/fiery-constitutional-debate-splits-senate-republicans/article_8ad20c76-e8c5-55af-aeb4-6a7f80859eb4.html |access-date=April 30, 2021}} and it has been influential at promoting opposition to it among Republican legislators.{{cite book |last1=Russ |first1=Feingold |title=The Constitution in Jeopardy |last2=Prindiville |first2=Peter |publisher=Hachette Book Group |year=2022 |isbn=978-1541701526 |location=New York |pages=142, 164–65}} The JBS also supports auditing and eventually dismantling the Federal Reserve System.{{cite web|title=Federal Reserve|work=Jbs.org|url=http://www.jbs.org/issues-pages/federal-reserve|access-date=July 7, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120721011333/http://www.jbs.org/issues-pages/federal-reserve|archive-date=July 21, 2012|url-status=dead}}{{Primary source inline|date=October 2021}} The JBS holds that the United States Constitution gives only Congress the ability to coin money, and does not permit it to delegate this power, or to transform the dollar into a fiat currency not backed by gold or silver.{{Primary source inline|date=October 2021}}
Its publication The New American has described what it sees as American moral decline and threats to the family, including abortion, birth control, divorce, drugs, homosexuality, crime, violence, secular humanism, teenage pregnancy, teen suicide, environmentalism, feminism and pornography.{{Sfn|Stewart|2002|p=440}} The JBS has alleged that moral degeneracy is perpetrated by a conspiracy to make the United States vulnerable to internationalism.{{Sfn|Stewart|2002|p=441}} A JBS pamphlet distributed in 2024 illustrating a school on fire urged parents to withdraw children from public education, saying, "Reforming the schools is no longer an option. We must get them out now!"{{cite web | last1=Schott | first1=Bryan | title=Fringe politics take center stage at Republican U.S. Senate debate hosted by Utah Eagle Forum | url=https://www.sltrib.com/news/politics/2024/04/10/fringe-politics-take-center-stage/ | date=April 10, 2024 | work=The Salt Lake Tribune | access-date=April 16, 2024 | quote=One particularly eye-catching pamphlet from the radical John Birch Society shows a public school on fire with the phrase “Get them out!” in capital letters on the front. “If the public school were on fire, and your children and grandchildren were inside, what would you do?” the back of the pamphlet read. After warning of the dangers of critical race theory and how students are allegedly being sexualized, the reader is told, “Reforming the schools is no longer an option. We must get them out now!”}}
The JBS has been described as ultraconservative,{{Cite news|title=Business Bookshelf: Piles of Green From Black Gold|first=J. Lynn|last=Lunsford|work=The Wall Street Journal |date=February 4, 2009|page=A.11}}
{{Cite news|title=Beck's backing bumps Skousen book to top |first=Sharon |last=Haddock|work=Deseret News|location=Salt Lake City, Utah|date=March 21, 2009}}
{{Cite news|title=Churches tackle tough topic of race|first=Shelia|last=Byrd|work=Sunday Gazette-Mail |location=Charleston, W.V.|date=May 25, 2008|page=C.5}} far-right,{{Cite book |last=Burch |first=Kurt |title=Constituting international political economy |author2=Robert Allen Denemark |publisher=Lynne Rienner Publishers |year=1997 |isbn=978-1-55587-660-9 |page=125}}
{{Cite news |last=Oshinsky |first=David |date=January 27, 2008 |title=In the Heart of the Heart of Conspiracy |page=23 |work=The New York Times Book Review}}
{{Cite journal |last=Danielson |first=Chris |date=February 2009 |title=Lily White and Hard Right: The Mississippi Republican Party and Black Voting, 1965–1980 |journal=The Journal of Southern History |volume=75 |issue=1 |page=83}}
{{Cite journal |last=Lee |first=Martha F |date=Fall 2005 |title=Nesta Webster: The Voice of Conspiracy |journal=Journal of Women's History |volume=17 |issue=3 |page=81 |doi=10.1353/jowh.2005.0033 |s2cid=143991823}}
{{cite book |last=Blumenthal |first=Max |title=Republican Gomorrah: inside the movement that shattered the party |publisher=Nation Books |year=2010 |isbn=978-1568584171 |location=New York |page=332 |quote=Skousen's vocal support for the Far-right John Birch Society's claim that Communists controlled President Dwight Eisenhower cost him the support of the corporate backers who had paid for his Red-bashing lecture tours.}}{{Cite journal |last=Walsh |first=DA. |title=The Right-Wing Popular Front: The Far Right and American Conservatism in the 1950s. |journal=Journal of American History |date=2020 |volume=107 |issue=2 |pages=411–432| doi=10.1093/jahist/jaaa182}} "But this emphasis on the 1960s and the setting of the boundaries between the 'responsible' conservatism of Buckley and Goldwater and the far-right 'fringe' of the Birchers has occluded the deep relationship between conservatives and the far right in the 1950s." extremist,{{Cite news|title=Perspective on Politics; The Big Tent Isn't Big Enough; By allowing extremists to flourish openly, the GOP forces out those who represent the party's moderate values.|first=Marvin | last=Liebman | work=Los Angeles Times|date=March 17, 1996|page=5}}
{{Cite news |title=The writer who chased the anti-Semites out |first=Jonathan S. |last=Tobin |work=The Jerusalem Post |date=March 9, 2008 |page=14}}
{{Cite news|title = Looking for conservatism|first = Michael|last = Gerson|work = Times Daily|location = Florence, Ala.|date = March 10, 2009}} and fringe.{{Cite web |last=Ward |first=Ian |date=2023-03-19 |title=The fringe group that broke the GOP's brain — and helped it win elections |url=https://www.vox.com/23638608/john-birch-society-trump-gop-robert-welch |access-date=2023-09-28 |website=Vox |language=en}} The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) lists the society as a "Patriot" group, a group that "advocate[s] or adhere[s] to extreme antigovernment doctrines".{{cite web| url = https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/intelligence-report/2009/patriot-groups |title = 'Patriot' Groups |access-date = February 1, 2018 |publisher = Southern Poverty Law Center |date = February 26, 2009|quote=Generally, Patriot groups define themselves as opposed to the 'New World Order' or advocate or adhere to extreme antigovernment doctrines. ... Listing here does not imply that the groups advocate or engage in violence or other criminal activities, or are racist.}} By the 1990s, the JBS was perceived as "more mainstream conservative" than in the 1960s.{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=443–444}} It has also been associated with the American libertarian movement,{{cite news |last1=Tanenhaus |first1=Sam |last2=Rutenberg |first2=Jim |title=Rand Paul's Mixed Inheritance |newspaper=The New York Times |date=January 25, 2014 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/26/us/politics/rand-pauls-mixed-inheritance.html |access-date=August 5, 2021}}{{cite magazine |last=Kaminer |first=Wendy |title=Will the Right Find Libertarianism? |magazine=The Atlantic |date=March 18, 2010 |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2010/03/will-the-right-find-libertarianism/37673/ |access-date=August 5, 2021}} as well as business nationalism.{{sfn|Verhoeven|2015|pp=2, 4, 38}} The society's worldview was noted in the early 2000s for influencing the American militia movement, although the JBS had not publicly called for paramilitary training.{{Cite journal |last1=Freilich |first1=Joshua D. |last2=Pienik |first2=Jeremy A. |last3=Howard |first3=Gregory J. |date=2001-05-01 |title=Toward Comparative Studies of the U.S. Militia Movement |url=https://brill.com/abstract/journals/ijcs/42/1-2/article-p163_8.xml |journal=International Journal of Comparative Sociology |volume=42 |issue=1 |pages=163–210 |doi=10.1163/156851801300171751|url-access=subscription }}{{Cite journal |last=Crothers |first=Lane |date=June 2002 |title=The Cultural Foundations of the Modern Militia Movement |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/07393140220145225 |journal=New Political Science |language=en |volume=24 |issue=2 |pages=222, 230 |doi=10.1080/07393140220145225 |s2cid=143461538 |issn=0739-3148|url-access=subscription }} Extremism expert George Michael wrote that "a virtual who's who of the American radical right had at one time or another sojourned" in the JBS.{{Cite book |last=Michael |first=George |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203563212 |title=Confronting Right Wing Extremism and Terrorism in the USA |date=2003-09-02 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-134-37762-6 |pages=41–42|doi=10.4324/9780203563212}}
=Influence on conservatism=
The JBS contributed to the development of modern American conservatism through its organizational tactics and its promotion of right-wing political views.{{sfn|Verhoeven|2015|pp=260–263, 266–271}} Despite never considering itself a religious organization, the JBS played a role in the rise of the Moral Majority and the Christian right as major political forces, ideologically and tactically influencing multiple leaders in that movement including Tim LaHaye and Phyllis Schlafly.{{rp|iv, 156–157}} Scholar Celestini Carmen argues that LaHaye used the JBS's culture war methods and rhetoric of "fear, apocalyptic thought and conspiracy" to forge the Moral Majority, with "fear, anger, and disgust as essential ingredients."{{rp|iv, 37, 156–157, 283, 322–325, 328–334}} Joyce Mao states that "Evangelical theology easily lent itself to anticommunist crusade". She additionally contends that Christian pastors, including James W. Fifield Jr. who helped Welch expand to California, helped pave the way for the JBS.{{Cite book |last=Mao |first=Joyce |title=Asia First: China and the Making of Modern American Conservatism |date=2015 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=9780226252858 |location=Chicago |chapter=Onward, Christian Soldiers: The John Birch Society}} The historian D. J. Mulloy wrote in 2014 that the JBS has served as "a kind of bridge" between the Old Right (including the McCarthyites) of the 1940s{{ndash}}50s, the New Right of the 1970s{{ndash}}80s, and the Tea Party right of the 21st century.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p=11}}
Professor Edward H. Miller wrote that Welch and the JBS were "never excommunicated" from conservatism and that "the ideas of the John Birch Society paved the way for the conservatism of the twentieth century" and "shaped events in the twenty-first century".{{cite book|last=Miller|first=Edward H. |year=2021 |title=A Conspiratorial Life: Robert Welch, the John Birch Society, and the Revolution of American Conservatism |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tZxNEAAAQBAJ |location=Chicago |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0226449050 |oclc=1304351277}}{{rp|page=8–10}} Scholar Daniel Smith writes that as the JBS, along with Liberty Lobby, became institutionalized "ideological hubs" between the 1960s and 1980s – with a focus on spreading their views through publications and other media – they helped shape anti-internationalism into anti-globalism.{{Cite thesis |last=Smith |first=Daniel John |title='The False Song of Globalism': Anti-Globalist Politics and Ideology in the United States from 1945 to 2000 |date=November 2021 |access-date=June 1, 2025 |publisher=University of Cambridge |url=https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/bitstreams/5211d62e-828a-42ca-bf85-491fd212831a/download |chapter=From Anti-Internationalism to Anti-Globalism: Populism, Conspiracism, and the New Right, 1965–1985}} Miller also writes that JBS helped stop the Equal Rights Amendment and helped set the stage for the Reagan Era,{{rp|page=330, 347–351}} while Mulloy writes that the JBS "played an essential role in the revitalization of conservatism"{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|pp=188–189}} and "trained a generation of conservative activists." According to Professor Matthew Dallek, modern American conservatism "bear[s] the imprint of the John Birch Society,"{{cite book|last=Dallek|first=Matthew |year=2023 |title=Birchers: How the John Birch Society Radicalized the American Right |location=New York |publisher=Hachette Book Group |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YMF4EAAAQBAJ |isbn=978-1541673564}}{{rp|page=2}} and "the GOP has largely replaced the ideological tenets of Reaganism with a worldview inherited from the John Birch Society (JBS)." Dallek also writes that the organization's pioneering use of front groups "became a template for conservative advocacy for decades to come."{{Rp|page=50}} According to The Atlantic in 2024, Donald Trump's 2016 election "saw many of its core instincts finally reflected in the White House," and the JBS "now fits neatly into the mainstream of the American right."{{cite web | last=Calabro | first=Elaina Plott | title=The Return of the John Birch Society | website=The Atlantic | date=February 23, 2024 | url=https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2024/02/john-birch-society-cpac-conservatism/677542/ | access-date=February 27, 2024}}
JBS took an early stance in opposing abortion and social liberalism,{{rp|page=347, 357–360}} and its TRIM committees, which supported lower taxes, helped lead to the Reagan tax cuts.{{rp|page=361–64}}{{cite web |last1=Brooks |first1=Anthony |last2=Chang |first2=Jonathan |title=The history of far-right populism, from the John Birch Society to Trumpism |website=WBUR-FM |date=July 13, 2022 |url=https://www.wbur.org/onpoint/2022/07/13/the-history-of-far-right-populism-from-the-john-birch-society-to-qanon |access-date=July 26, 2022}} By the early 2020s, multiple commentators and academics argued that the John Birch Society and its beliefs had successfully taken over the Republican Party and the broader conservative movement.{{cite web |last=Miller |first=Edward H. |title=Op-Ed: Today's right-wing conspiracy theory mentality can be traced back to the John Birch Society |website=Los Angeles Times |date=January 9, 2022 |url=https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2022-01-09/john-birch-society-conspiracy-theories |access-date=April 19, 2022}}{{cite magazine |last=Lehmann |first=Chris |title=We All Live in the John Birch Society's World Now |magazine=The New Republic |date=November 23, 2021 |url=https://newrepublic.com/article/164510/live-john-birch-societys-world-now-robert-welch-biography-review |access-date=April 19, 2022}}{{cite web |last=Tracinski |first=Robert |date=April 13, 2022 |title=Did the John Birch Society Win in the End? |url=https://www.thebulwark.com/did-the-john-birch-society-win-in-the-end/ |access-date=April 19, 2022 |website=The Bulwark}}{{cite web | last=Robinson | first=Nathan | title=How the John Birch Society Won the Long Game | website=The Nation | date=June 8, 2023 | url=https://www.thenation.com/article/culture/birchers-matthew-dallek/ | access-date=October 24, 2023}}{{cite magazine | last=Perlstein | first=Rick | title=The John Birch Society Never Left | magazine=The New Republic | date=March 8, 2021 | url=https://newrepublic.com/article/161603/john-birch-society-qanon-trump | access-date=October 24, 2023}} Efforts of Moms for Liberty in the 2020s to influence public education in the United States via school board elections and book bans have been compared to JBS's efforts in the 1960s.{{cite web | last=Pengelly | first=Martin | title=Moms for Liberty, meet John Birch: the roots of US rightwing book bans | website=the Guardian | date=May 6, 2023 | url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/may/06/moms-for-liberty-john-birch-society-far-right-book-bans | access-date=October 24, 2023}}{{cite news | last=Dallek | first=Matthew | title=How the extreme right tried to 'win' California schools in the 1960s | website=San Francisco Chronicle | date=September 20, 2023 | url=https://www.sfchronicle.com/opinion/openforum/article/john-birch-society-18374455.php | access-date=October 24, 2023}}
When introducing legislation to withdraw the U.S. from the UN, Senator Mike Lee used "some of the same arguments to support the bill" that the JBS "first employed."{{cite web | last1=Schott | first1=Bryan | title=Sen. Mike Lee wants the U.S. to sever ties with the United Nations | url=https://www.sltrib.com/news/politics/2023/12/07/sen-mike-lee-wants-us-sever-ties/ | date=December 7, 2023 | work=The Salt Lake Tribune | access-date=January 17, 2023}} By the 2020s, some national Republican and conservative figures openly associated with the JBS.
History
=Origins=
The John Birch Society was established on December 9, 1958,"John Birch Society", by Thomas C. Ellington, in Culture Wars: An Encyclopedia of Issues, Viewpoints, and Voices, ed. by Roger Chapman (M. E. Sharpe, 2010) p. 286 in Indianapolis, Indiana, at the conclusion of a two-day session of a group of 12 people led by Robert W. Welch Jr. Welch was a retired candy manufacturer from Belmont, Massachusetts, who had been a state Republican Party official and had unsuccessfully run in its 1950 lieutenant governor primary.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p={{page needed|date=September 2023}}}}James and Marti Hefley, The Secret File on John Birch, Tyndale House Publishers, 1980, {{ISBN|0-8423-5862-5}}[https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/john-birch-society-founded History] In 1954, Welch wrote the first book about John Birch (an Air Force intelligence officer and Baptist missionary), titled The Life of John Birch. He organized an anti-Communist society to "promote less government, more responsibility, and a better world". He named his new organization in memory of Birch, saying that Birch was an unknown but dedicated anti-Communist, and the first American casualty of the Cold War.{{cite book | last=Schoenwald | first=Jonathan M. | title=A Time for Choosing: The Rise of Modern American Conservatism | year=2002 | publisher=Oxford University Press (US) | isbn=0-19-515726-5 | chapter=3 – A New Kind of Conservatism: The John Birch Society}} Welch alleged that a Communist conspiracy within the American government had suppressed the truth about Birch's killing.{{Cite magazine |last=Mallon |first=Thomas |date=January 4, 2016 |title=A View from the Fringe: The John Birch Society and the rise of the radical right. |url=http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/01/11/a-view-from-the-fringe |access-date=April 7, 2022 |magazine=The New Yorker |language=en-US}}
==John Birch==
{{Main|John Birch (missionary)}}
John Birch was an American Baptist who went to China as a missionary in 1940, when the Japanese invasion had created suffering and chaos during the Second Sino-Japanese War. He was a U.S. military intelligence officer under Brigadier General Claire Lee Chennault in China. Chennault commanded the "Flying Tigers" and afterwards U.S. Army Air Forces units in China. In April 1942, Birch helped Lieutenant Colonel Doolittle and his flight crew, among other crews, a few days after they bailed out of their B-25 bomber over Japanese-held territory in China. Sixteen B-25s led by Doolittle bombed Tokyo ("Doolittle raid") off the Navy aircraft carrier USS Hornet during the United States' first attack on Japan. Beginning in July 1942, Birch, who spoke Chinese, became an Army intelligence officer. He operated alone or with Nationalist Chinese soldiers, and regularly risked his life in Japanese-held territory in China. His many activities included setting up Chinese agent and radio intelligence networks, and rescuing downed American pilots; he had two emergency aircraft runways built.{{cite web |url=https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/2016/09/06/for-god-and-country-the-story-of-john-birch/ |title=For God and Country: The Story of John Birch |last=McGowan |first=Sam |website=Warfare History Net |date=September 6, 2016|access-date=March 10, 2021}} Although he suffered from malaria, he refused furloughs.
In 1945, Birch was promoted to captain and began working in China both for and with the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the U.S. wartime intelligence service in World War II. In August, after the Japanese surrendered, Birch was ordered by the OSS to northern China to obtain the surrender of the Japanese commanders at their installations. On August 24, nine days after the war, Birch left by train with his party which included two American soldiers, five Chinese officers, and two Koreans who spoke Japanese. After spending a night in a village, the party proceeded by handcar the next morning, and ran into a group of 300 armed Chinese Communists. Birch and his Chinese officer aide approached them and were told to surrender their weapons and the group's equipment. Birch refused, and after arguing about it with their commander, they were allowed to proceed. Along the way, Birch's party encountered more groups of Communists. The party arrived at a train station at Hwang Kao which was occupied by more Chinese Communists. Birch requested to speak with their leader. Birch and his aide approached the group's leader and after Birch refused to give up his sidearm, both were beaten and shot. Birch's corpse was bayonetted. The rest of Birch's party were taken prisoner. Birch's aide survived and the prisoners were later released. Birch's remains were recovered, and a Catholic burial service was held with military honors on a hillside outside of Suzhou, in eastern China. The Chinese Communists, who were active in northern China and Manchuria, were supposedly World War II allies with the United States. Birch believed that Mao Zedong and the Chinese Communists intended to take over China after the war and move into Korea. There were different explanations and theories as to why Birch was killed, ranging from his party showing up at Hwang Kao instead of Ninchuan, Birch's scheduled meeting with Chinese puppet troops of the Sixth Army under General Hu Peng-chu, misunderstanding by local guerillas, and provocation from Birch himself.{{cite book |last1=Spector |first1=Ronald H. |title=In the ruins of empire: the Japanese surrender and the battle for postwar Asia |date=2007 |location=New York |publisher=Random House |isbn=9780375509155 |edition=1st}}
==Founding and beliefs==
The founding members of the JBS included Harry Lynde Bradley, co-founder of the Allen Bradley Company and the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation,{{cite web |last1=Horwitz |first1=Jeff |last2=Bauer |first2=Scott |title=Before Walker run, a conservative foundation set the stage |url=https://news.yahoo.com/walker-run-conservative-foundation-set-stage-072245498--election.html |website=Yahoo.com |access-date=October 21, 2015 |date=June 12, 2015}}{{cite news |url=http://old.seattletimes.com/text/2016875571.html |title=Conservative empire built from Wisconsin foundation |first1=Bice |last1=Daniel |first2=Glauber |last2=Bill |first3=Ben |last3=Poston |newspaper=The Seattle Times |date=November 28, 2011 |access-date=November 12, 2019}} Fred C. Koch, founder of Koch Industries,{{cite book |last=Davis |first=Jonathan T. |title=Forbes Richest People: The Forbes Annual Profile of the World's Wealthiest Men and Women |year=1997 |publisher=Wiley |isbn=978-0-471-17751-7 |page=138 |quote=Founding member (1958) John Birch Society—reportedly after seeing Russian friends liquidated}}{{cite book |title=Hoover's 500: Profiles of America's Largest Business Enterprises |year=1996 |publisher=Hoover's Business Press |isbn=978-1-57311-009-9 |page=[https://archive.org/details/hoovers50000refe/page/286 286] |quote=In 1929 Koch took his process to the Soviet Union, but he grew disenchanted with Stalinism and returned home to become a founding member of the anticommunist John Birch Society. |url=https://archive.org/details/hoovers50000refe/page/286}}{{cite news |title=Brothers at Odds |first=Leslie |last=Wayne | newspaper=The New York Times |issn=0362-4331 |date=December 7, 1986 |at=Sec. 6; Part 2, p 100 col. 1. |quote=He returned a fervent anti-Communist who would later become a founding member of the John Birch Society.}}{{cite book |last1=Diamond |first1=Sara |title=Roads to Dominion: Right-Wing Movements and Political Power in the United States |year=1995 |publisher=Guilford Press |location=New York |isbn=0-89862-862-8 |page=[https://archive.org/details/roadstodominionr00diamrich/page/324 324 n. 86.] |url=https://archive.org/details/roadstodominionr00diamrich/page/324}} and Robert Waring Stoddard, president of Wyman-Gordon, a major industrial enterprise.{{cite web |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1984/12/16/obituaries/robert-stoddard-dies-at-78-a-founder-of-birch-society.html |title=Robert Stoddard Dies at 78; A Founder of Birch Society |date=December 16, 1984 |work=The New York Times |access-date=May 7, 2012}} Another was Revilo P. Oliver, a University of Illinois professor who was later expelled from the Society and helped found the National Alliance. Koch became one of the organization's primary financial supporters. According to investigative journalist Jane Mayer, David Koch and Charles Koch, Koch's sons, were also members of the JBS; however, both left it before the 1970s.{{Cite web |url=http://theconversation.com/the-john-birch-society-is-still-influencing-american-politics-60-years-after-its-founding-107925 |title=The John Birch Society is still influencing American politics, 60 years after its founding |last=Towler |first=Christopher| date=December 6, 2018 |website=The Conversation |access-date=May 4, 2021}} A transcript of Welch's two-day presentation at the founding meeting was published as The Blue Book of the John Birch Society, and became a cornerstone of its beliefs, with each new prospective member receiving a copy.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p=3}} Welch stated:
{{blockquote|"[B]oth the U.S. and Soviet governments are controlled by the same furtive conspiratorial cabal of internationalists, greedy bankers, and corrupt politicians. If left unexposed, the traitors inside the U.S. government would betray the country's sovereignty to the United Nations for a collectivist New World Order, managed by a 'one-world socialist government'."{{Cite book |last=Welch |first=Robert E. |title=The Blue Book of the John Birch Society |publisher=American Opinion Books |year=1961 |isbn=0-88279-215-6}}{{cite web |url=http://www.publiceye.org/tooclose/jbs.html |title=John Birch Society |access-date=July 18, 2008 |publisher=Political Research Associates}}}} Welch saw collectivism as the main threat to Western culture, and modern American liberals as "secret Communist traitors" who provided cover for the gradual process of collectivism, with the ultimate goal of replacing the nations of western civilization with a one-world socialist government. He wrote: "There are many stages of welfarism, socialism, and collectivism in general, but Communism is the ultimate state of them all, and they all lead inevitably in that direction." Welch predicted that "you have only a few more years before the country in which you live will become four separate provinces in a world-wide Communist dominion ruled by police-state methods from the Kremlin."{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=423—447}}
Welch held that devout, fundamentalist religious believers (though fundamentalist Christians in particular) were key to resisting atheistic communism. He saw such religious belief as something which would "instill values of individual responsibility and morality that prevented practitioners from relying on the state for their welfare. By inference, those who took government assistance or supported New Deal concepts not only forfeited their self-determination but also could not be considered to be truly spiritual." He believed that ecumenism, in the form of the National Council of Churches whom he opposed, was a way of exerting Communist control over Protestant churches.{{Cite thesis |last=Savage |first=James A. |title=Save Our Republic: Battling John Birch in California's Conservative Cradle |date=2015 |access-date=June 3, 2025 |publisher=University of Kentucky |url=https://uknowledge.uky.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1026&context=history_etds&httpsredir=1&referer= |pages=52–57}}
The JBS was organized to be, in Welch's words, "under completely authoritative control at all levels". It incorporated aspects of business hierarchies and also the Communist cells Welch opposed but whose discipline he admired. Chapters of 10 to 20 members each had a leader appointed from above, and were expected to meet twice a month. Members of chapters that grew larger than 20 members were expected to break off and form a new small chapter.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p={{page needed|date=September 2023}}}}
The activities of the JBS include distributing literature, pamphlets, magazines, videos and other material; the society also sponsors a Speaker's Bureau, which invites "speakers who are keenly aware of the motivations that drive political policy".[http://www.jbs.org/speakers-bureau/ John Birch Society Speakers Bureau] One of the first public activities of the society was a "Get US Out!" (of membership in the UN) campaign, which claimed in 1959 that the "Real nature of [the] UN is to build a One World Government".{{Cite book | author1 = Matthew Lyons | author2 = Chip Berlet | title = Right-Wing Populism in America: Too Close for Comfort | publisher = The Guilford Press | location = New York | year = 2000 | page = [https://archive.org/details/rightwingpopulis00berlrich/page/179 179] | isbn = 1-57230-562-2 |url=https://archive.org/details/rightwingpopulis00berlrich}} The society also alleged that Communists and UN supporters were conducting an "assault on Christmas" to "destroy all religious beliefs and customs". In 1960, Welch advised JBS members to: "Join your local P.T.A. at the beginning of the school year, get your conservative friends to do likewise, and go to work to take it over."{{Cite book | last = French | first = William Marshall | title = American Secondary Education | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=180bAAAAMAAJ | access-date = July 20, 2008 | year = 1967 | publisher = Odyssey Press | page = 477 | isbn = 0-7719-9198-3}} One Man's Opinion,{{OCLC|1713996}}.{{full citation needed|date=September 2023}} a magazine launched by Welch in 1956, was renamed American Opinion.{{ISSN|0003-0236}} {{OCLC|1480501}}.{{full citation needed|date=September 2023}} In 1965, Welch established a JBS-affiliated publication known as The Review of the News, which was intended for a larger readership and covered news.{{OCLC|12803345}}.{{full citation needed|date=September 2023}} In 1985, these magazines merged into The New American, a biweekly magazine published by the Society.{{cite web |last1=Barbagallo |first1=Paul |title=The New American Goes Mobile |url=https://www.adweek.com/media/an-interview-the-new-american-publisher-chief-executive-john-f-mcmanus-magazines-new-mobile-content-keeps-him-awake-night-39575/ |website=Adweek |access-date=29 September 2023 |date=1 June 2006}}
=Eisenhower issue=
For the first eighteen months of its existence, JBS "operated in relative obscurity";{{sfn|Mulloy|2014a|p=15}} though in 1959 it began to gain momentum as it started one of its earliest front groups, the Committee Against Summit Entanglements (CASE), to oppose President Dwight D. Eisenhower's 1959 summit with Soviet First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev. The JBS viewed Eisenhower as weak, having surrendered to the Soviet Union. By raising money – in part from wealthy figures in business – in order to purchase advertisements in The New York Times and over a hundred other newspapers, sending hundreds of thousands of postcards, as well as circulating a petition, CASE's cause gained the support of the right. The group's campaign was a success in terms of bringing Birch talking points into broader discourse.{{Rp|pages=48–50}} The following year, in July 1960, the Chicago Daily News published a relatively in-depth story on the Society, including the contention of founder Robert Welch, that Eisenhower was a "dedicated, conscious agent" of the communist conspiracy in the United States. "For the next few years Birchers found themselves at the center of a storm of controversy".{{sfn|Mulloy|2014a|p=15}}
Welch had first made the statement in 1954 when he wrote in a widely circulated statement, The Politician: "Could Eisenhower really be simply a smart politician, entirely without principles and hungry for glory, who is only the tool of the Communists? The answer is yes." He went on: "With regard to ... Eisenhower, it is difficult to avoid raising the question of deliberate treason."Quoted at [http://www.jbs.org/jbs-news-feed/1375-glenn-beck-talks-with-jbs-president-john-f-mcmanus "Glenn Beck talks with JBS President John F. McManus" Aug. 15, 2006], The John Birch Society {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100112151401/http://www.jbs.org/jbs-news-feed/1375-glenn-beck-talks-with-jbs-president-john-f-mcmanus |date=January 12, 2010}}. The controversial paragraph was removed before final publication of The Politician.{{Cite book |last = Welch |first = Robert |title = The Politician |publisher = Western Islands |location = Boston |year = 1975 |isbn = 99908-64-98-5 |pages = cxxxviii–cxxxix |quote = At this point in the original manuscript, there was one paragraph in which I expressed my own personal belief as to the most likely explanation of the events and actions with this document had tried to bring into focus. In a confidential letter, neither published nor offered for sale and restricted to friends who were expected to respect the confidence but offer me in exchange their own points of view, this seemed entirely permissible and proper. It does not seem so for an edition of the letter that is now to be published and given, probably, fairly wide distribution. So that paragraph, and two explanatory paragraphs, connected with it, have been omitted here. And the reader is left entirely free to draw his own conclusions. | no-pp = true}}
The sensationalism of Welch's charges against Eisenhower prompted several conservatives and Republicans, most prominently Goldwater and the intellectuals of William F. Buckley's circle, to renounce outright or quietly shun the group. Buckley, an early friend and admirer of Welch, regarded his accusations against Eisenhower as "paranoid and idiotic libels" and attempted unsuccessfully to purge Welch from the Birch Society.John B. Judis, William F. Buckley, Jr.: Patron Saint of the Conservatives (2001) pp. 193–200 From then on, Buckley became the leading intellectual spokesman and organizer of the anti-Bircher conservatives.[http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/10/18/101018fa_fact_wilentz?printable=true Confounding Fathers: The Tea Party's Cold War Roots] by historian Sean Wilentz, The New Yorker, October 18, 2010 Buckley's biographer, John B. Judis, wrote that "Buckley was beginning to worry that with the John Birch Society growing so rapidly, the right-wing upsurge in the country would take an ugly, even Fascist turn rather than leading toward the kind of conservatism National Review had promoted." Despite Buckley's opposition, the author Edward H. Miller wrote, the JBS "remained a force in the conservative movement", and arguments to the contrary are "greatly exaggerated".{{rp|page=211, 258}}
The booklet found support from Ezra Taft Benson, then Eisenhower's Secretary of Agriculture and later the 13th president of the LDS Church. In a letter to his friend FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover, Benson asked "how can a man [Eisenhower] who seems to be so strong for Christian principles and base American concepts be so effectively used as a tool to serve the Communist conspiracy?" Benson privately fought to prevent the Bureau from condemning the JBS, which prompted Hoover to distance himself from Benson. At one point in 1971, Hoover directed his staff to lie to Benson to avoid having to meet with him about the issue.{{cite news|last1=Davidson|first1=Lee|title=FBI files shed light on Ezra Taft Benson, Ike and the Birch Society |work=The Salt Lake Tribune |url=http://archive.sltrib.com/article.php?id=50349153&itype=CMSID |access-date=February 11, 2018 |date=November 16, 2010}}
=1960s=
In the 1960s, the JBS became known as a right-wing organization with an anti-Communist ideology. It was moderately active in that decade with numerous chapters, but rarely engaged in coalition building with other conservatives. It was rejected by most conservatives because of Welch's conspiracy theories. The philosopher Ayn Rand said in a 1964 Playboy interview: "I consider the Birch Society futile, because they are not for capitalism but merely against Communism ... I gather they believe that the disastrous state of today's world is caused by a Communist conspiracy. This is childishly naïve and superficial. No country can be destroyed by a mere conspiracy, it can be destroyed only by ideas."{{cite web | url = http://www.ellensplace.net/ar_pboy.html | title = Who was Ayn Rand? – a biography, Playboy interview, 1964 | access-date = July 18, 2008}}{{cite web |first=Don |last=Hauptman |date=March 1, 2004 |title=The 'Lost' Parts of Ayn Rand's Playboy Interview |url=http://www.objectivistcenter.org/cth--836-The_Lost_Parts_Ayn_Rands_Playboy_Interview.aspx |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100620073111/http://www.objectivistcenter.org/cth--836-The_Lost_Parts_Ayn_Rands_Playboy_Interview.aspx |archive-date=June 20, 2010 |url-status=dead |publisher=The Atlas Society}} Some historians said the JBS had a large role in 1960s politics, and functioned much like a third party, forcing "the GOP, the Democrats, and conservatives of all types to respond to its agenda", in Jonathan M. Schoenwald's words.{{cite book |last=Schoenwald |first=Jonathan M. |title=Time for Choosing: The Rise of Modern American Conservatism |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2001 |page=9}}{{Sfn|Mulloy|2014|pp=12–13}}
By March 1961, the JBS had 60,000 to 100,000 members and, according to Welch, "a staff of 28 people in the Home Office; about 30 Coordinators (or Major Coordinators) in the field, who are fully paid as to salary and expenses; and about 100 Coordinators (or Section Leaders as they are called in some areas), who work on a volunteer basis as to all or part of their salary, or expenses, or both". According to Political Research Associates (a non-profit research group that investigates the far-right), the society "pioneered grassroots lobbying, combining educational meetings, petition drives and letter-writing campaigns. Rick Perlstein described its main activity in the 1960s as "monthly meetings to watch a film by Welch, followed by writing postcards or letters to government officials linking specific policies to the Communist menace".{{cite book|author=Rick Perlstein|title=Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DG3BE0C0VkAC&pg=PA117|year=2001|publisher=Hill and Wang|page=117|isbn=0786744154}}
One early campaign against the second summit between the United States and the Soviet Union (which urged President Dwight D. Eisenhower, "If you go, don't come back!"{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p={{page needed|date=September 2023}}}}) generated over 600,000 postcards and letters, according to the society. In 1961 Welch offered $2,300 in prizes to college students for the best essays on "grounds of impeachment" of Chief Justice Warren, a prime target of ultra-conservatives.{{cite book|author1=Oscar Theodore Barck Jr.|author2=Nelson Manfred Blake|title=Since 1900 A History of the United States in Our Times|year=1969 |publisher=Macmillan Company|location=New York|page=754}} A June 1964 society campaign to oppose Xerox corporate sponsorship of TV programs favorable to the UN produced 51,279 letters from 12,785 individuals." By the middle of the decade, it had 400 American Opinion bookstores selling its literature.{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=423—447}}
In 1962, William F. Buckley Jr., editor of the National Review, an influential conservative magazine, denounced Welch and the John Birch Society as "far removed from common sense" and urged the GOP to purge itself of Welch's influence.{{cite magazine |url=https://www.commentarymagazine.com/article/goldwater-the-john-birch-society-and-me/ |title=Goldwater, the John Birch Society, and Me|magazine=Commentary |date=March 1, 2008 |access-date=March 9, 2008 |author=William F. Buckley Jr.}} In the late 1960s, Welch insisted that the Lyndon B. Johnson administration's war against Communist guerillas and North Vietnamese troops during the Vietnam War, which was unpopular among liberals and leftists but not among conservatives, was part of a Communist plot aimed at taking over the United States. Welch demanded that the United States get out of Vietnam, thus aligning the JBS with the left.{{Cite journal |doi=10.2307/2128280 |last1=Stephen Earl |first1=Bennett |year=1971 |title=Modes of Resolution of a 'Belief Dilemma' in the Ideology of the John Birch Society |journal=Journal of Politics |volume=33 |issue=3 |pages=735–772 |jstor=2128280 |s2cid=154740758}} The society opposed water fluoridation, which it called "mass medicine" and a Communist effort to destroy American children.{{cite news |author=Dion Lefler |title=Fluoride fight has long roots, passionate advocates |newspaper=The Wichita Eagle |date=October 27, 2012 |quote=The John Birch Society was an active participant in Wichita's 1964 referendum that repealed fluoridation after the City Commission had voted to implement it. |url=http://www.kansas.com/news/article1101667.html |access-date=December 8, 2016}}{{cite journal |author=William Heisel |title=Does fluoride have lessons for the vaccine debate? |journal=Center for Health Journalism Newsletter |date=November 11, 2016 |quote=From the 1940s through the 1960s, groups like the John Birch Society were vocal opponents of water fluoridation. |url=http://www.centerforhealthjournalism.org/2016/11/10/does-fluoride-have-lessons-vaccine-debate |access-date=December 8, 2016}}{{cite news |title=It's a Day of Decision |newspaper=Los Angeles Times |date=April 28, 1966 |page=3 |first=Paul |last=Coates}}{{Sfn|Stewart|2002|p=430}}
Former Eisenhower cabinet member Ezra Taft Benson—a leading Mormon—spoke in favor of the JBS. In January 1963, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints issued a statement distancing itself from the Society.{{Cite journal |last1=Prince |first1=Gregory A. |year=2004 |title=The Red Peril, the Candy Maker, and the Apostle: David O. Mckay's Confrontation with Communism |journal=Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought |volume=37 |issue=2 |pages=37–94 |doi=10.2307/45227582 |jstor=45227582 |s2cid=254391712 |doi-access=free}} Antisemitic, racist, anti-Mormon, anti-Masonic groups criticized the organization's acceptance of Jews, non-whites, Masons, and Mormons as members. These opponents accused Welch of harboring feminist, ecumenical, and evolutionary ideas.{{cite web |url=http://www.mormoninquiry.typepad.com/mormon_inquiry/2006/06/a_spectre_was_h.html |title=A Spectre Haunting Mormonism |access-date=July 18, 2008}}{{cite web |first=Nicholas J. Jr. |last=Bove |title=The Belmont Brotherhood |url=http://www.watch.pair.com/belmont.html |access-date=July 18, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080513185843/http://watch.pair.com/belmont.html |archive-date=May 13, 2008 |url-status=dead}}{{Primary source inline|date=November 2021}} Welch rejected these accusations by his detractors: "All we are interested in here is opposing the advance of the Communists, and eventually destroying the whole Communist conspiracy, so that Jews and Christians alike, and Mohammedans and Buddhists, can again have a decent world in which to live."{{cite book |author=Robert Welch |year=1963 |publisher=John Birch Society |page=20 |title=The Neutralizers}}{{Primary source inline|date=November 2021}}
In a 1963 report, the California Senate Factfinding Subcommittee on Un-American Activities, following an investigation into the JBS, found no evidence it was "a secret, fascist, subversive, un-American, [or] anti-Semitic organization."{{cite book |title=Twelfth Report of the Senate Factfinding Subcommittee on Un-American Activities |location=Sacramento, California |publisher=Senate of the State of California |pages=61–62 |year=1963 |url=https://archive.org/details/1963ReportOfCalifSenateFactfindingSubcommitteeOnUnAmericanActivities/page/n77/mode/2up}}{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p=63}} In 1964, Welch favored Barry Goldwater for the Republican presidential nomination, but the membership split, with two-thirds supporting Goldwater and one-third supporting Richard Nixon, who did not run. A number of Birch members and their allies were Goldwater supporters in 1964 and a hundred of them were delegates at the 1964 Republican National Convention.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p=98}}
In April 1966, a New York Times article on New Jersey and the society voiced—in part—a concern for "the increasing tempo of radical right attacks on local government, libraries, school boards, parent-teacher associations, mental health programs, the Republican Party and, most recently, the ecumenical movement."{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1966/04/20/archives/foes-of-rising-birch-society-organize-in-jersey-foes-of-rising.html |title=Foes of Rising Birch Society Organize in Jersey |newspaper=The New York Times |date=April 20, 1966 |access-date=May 2, 2018 |last=Sullivan |first=Ronald |pages=1 |url-access=subscription}} It then characterized the society as "by far the most successful and 'respectable' radical right organization in the country. It operates alone or in support of other extremist organizations whose major preoccupation, like that of the Birchers, is the internal Communist conspiracy in the United States." The JBS also opposed the creation of the first sex education curriculum in the United States through a division called the Movement to Restore Decency (MOTOREDE).{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jBWYvXt18CwC&q=movement+to+restore+decency&pg=PA52 |title=Talk about Sex: the battles over sex education in the United States |last1=Irvine |first1=Janice M. |location=Berkeley, California |publisher=University of California Press |year=2004 |isbn=9780520243293 |page=52}} Surviving MOTOREDE pamphlets date from 1967 to 1971. Additionally, the JBS advocated against other manifestations of social liberalism, including abortion.{{rp|page=347, 357–360}} JBS members and activities were featured in "The Radical Americans", a series produced by National Educational Television (NET) and WGBH-TV that aired in 1966 on NET outlets.{{cite web |title=The Radical Americans |website=American Archive of Public Broadcasting |url=https://americanarchive.org/catalog?utf8=%E2%9C%93&f%5Bseries_titles%5D%5B%5D=Radical+Americans&f%5Baccess_types%5D%5B%5D=online&q=Radical+Americans|access-date=March 14, 2022}} JBS membership peaked in 1965 or 1966 at an estimated 100,000.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p={{page needed|date=September 2023}}}}
The JBS opposed the 1960s civil rights movement and claimed the movement had Communists in important positions. In the latter half of 1965, the JBS produced a flyer titled "What's Wrong With Civil Rights?" and used the flyer as a newspaper advertisement.{{cite book |last1=Epstein |first1=Benjamin R. |last2=Forster |first2=Arnold |author-link2=Arnold Forster (ADL)|title=Report on the John Birch Society, 1966 |year=1966 |publisher=Random House |page=9}}{{cite book |title=What's Wrong with Civil Rights? |year=1965 |publisher=American Opinion |location=Belmont, MA |oclc=56596124}} In the piece, one of the answers was: "For the civil rights movement in the United States, with all of its growing agitation and riots and bitterness, and insidious steps towards the appearance of a civil war, has not been infiltrated by the Communists, as you now frequently hear. It has been deliberately and almost wholly created by the Communists patiently building up to this present stage for more than forty years."{{cite news |title=The John Birch Society Asks: What's Wrong With Civil Rights? |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=u4syAAAAIBAJ&pg=4291,7598936 |newspaper=The Post-Times |location=West Palm Beach, FL |date=October 31, 1965 |page=A10 cols. 1–6 |access-date=January 30, 2011}} {{dead link|date=March 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes}} The society believed that the ultimate aim of the civil rights movement was the creation of a "Soviet Negro Republic" in the southeastern United States{{cite news |last1=Hill |first1=Gladwin |title=Birch Head Sees Red Rights Plot |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1963/08/16/archives/birch-head-sees-red-rights-plot-welch-calls-aim-formation-of-soviet.html |access-date=November 5, 2020 |work=The New York Times |date=August 16, 1963}} and opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, claiming it violated the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and overstepped individual states' rights to enact laws regarding civil rights. Some prominent black conservatives such as George Schuyler and Manning Johnson joined forces with the JBS during this period and echoed the Society's rhetoric about the civil-rights movement and the Civil Rights Act of 1964.{{cite journal | last=Russler | first=Brett | title="We aren't after a House Negro to prove our love for Black People": the complicated relationship between George S. Schuyler and the John Birch society | journal=The Sixties | publisher=Informa UK Limited | volume=13 | issue=2 | date=July 2, 2020 | issn=1754-1328 | doi=10.1080/17541328.2020.1837494 | pages=121–145| s2cid=226314820}}
Although Welch and the JBS publicly opposed racism and anti-Semitism, and had a policy of expelling individuals who held such views,{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p=63–64, 109}} in 1968, a notable faction of JBS members expressed opposition towards desegregation efforts and demonstrated solidarity with white nationalists by supporting George Wallace.{{Cite book |last=Nelson |first=Michael |title=Resilient America – Electing Nixon in 1968, Channeling Dissent, and Dividing Government |publisher=University Press of Kansas |year=2017 |isbn=978-0700624423 |page=209}}{{Cite web |last=Roberts |first=Zach D. |date=2023-05-05 |title=The Origins and Afterlife of the Infamous John Birch Society |url=https://progressive.org/api/content/c3a423ce-eb70-11ed-ba80-12163087a831/ |access-date=2023-07-08 |website=Progressive.org |language=en-us}}{{Cite journal |last=Terry |first=Don |date=3 March 2013 |title=The John Birch Society, the conspiracist group exiled by the right a half century ago, is on the march and gaining influence |url=https://www.splcenter.org/fighting-hate/intelligence-report/2013/bringing-back-birch |journal=Intelligence Report |issue=2013 Spring Issue}} Both the SPLC and the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith have ascertained the existence in the past of antisemitic and racist elements, such as Revilo P. Oliver and Eric D. Butler.{{Cite web |date=2015-03-20 |title=John Birch Society Charged with 'contributing to Anti-semitism' |url=https://www.jta.org/archive/john-birch-society-charged-with-contributing-to-anti-semitism |access-date=2023-09-26 |website=Jewish Telegraphic Agency |language=en-US}} Many of these individuals later left or were expelled from the JBS because of these views.{{sfn|Mulloy|2014|p=64, 185}} The JBS launched a "Support Your Local Police" campaign in the mid-1960s. The campaign openly advocated against the use of federal officers to enforce civil rights laws.{{cite book |last1=Berlet |first1=Chip |last2=Lyons |first2=Matthew N. |title=Right-Wing Populism in America: Too Close for Comfort |date=8 March 2018 |publisher=Guilford Publications |isbn=978-1-4625-3760-0 |page=181 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pDtRDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA181 |language=en}}
At the organization's tenth anniversary celebration in 1968, Welch announced the creation of John Birch University (now Robert Welch University),{{Cite news |date=December 8, 1968 |title=John Birch University Envisioned |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-courier-journal-john-birch-universit/168634904/ |access-date=March 23, 2025 |work=The Courier-Journal |pages=36 |via=Newspapers.com}} which it later described as an "alternative to the socialist/internationalist/atheist education afforded by the major government-controlled colleges and universities."{{Cite news |date=July 17, 2002 |title=Society: Group fighting number of misconceptions |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-post-crescent-society-group-fightin/168637660/ |access-date=March 23, 2025 |work=The Post-Crescent |pages=A8 |via=Newspapers.com}} John Birch University primarily served as a library and educational resource for decades, running summer youth camps around the United States.{{Cite news |date=October 17, 2003 |title=Society: Anti-communist period was group's heyday |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-post-crescent-society-anti-communis/168637877/ |access-date=March 23, 2025 |work=The Post-Crescent |pages=C8 |via=Newspapers.com}}{{Cite news |date=July 25, 1993 |title=Camp offers politics with right-wing twist |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/sun-journal-camp-offers-politics-with-ri/168636267/ |access-date=March 23, 2025 |work=Sun Journal |pages=2B |agency=Associated Press}}
=1970s=
By 1976, the JBS had 90,000 members, 240 paid staffers, and a $7 million annual budget according to a paper written by the American libertarian conservative tycoon Charles Koch.{{cite book |title=Dark Money |author=Jane Mayer |page=55}}
The JBS was at the center of a free-speech law case in the 1970s, after American Opinion accused a Chicago lawyer, Elmer Gertz, who was representing the family of a young man killed by a police officer, of being part of a Communist conspiracy to merge all police agencies in the country into one large force. The resulting libel suit, Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., reached the United States Supreme Court, which held that a state may allow a private figure such as Gertz to recover actual damages from a media defendant without proving malice but that a public figure does have to prove actual malice, according to the standard laid out in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, in order to recover presumed damages or punitive damages.{{Cite book | last1 = Haiman | first1 = Franklyn Saul | last2 = Tedford | first2 = Thomas L. | last3 = Herbeck | first3 = Dale | title = Freedom Of Speech In The United States | publisher = Strata Publishing | year = 2005 | isbn = 1-891136-10-0 | chapter = Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc | chapter-url = http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/comm/free_speech/gertz.html | access-date = May 12, 2008 | archive-date = May 17, 2008 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080517070902/http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/comm/free_speech/gertz.html | url-status = dead}} The court ordered a retrial in which Gertz prevailed.{{cite news |author= |date=23 April 1981 |title=Civil Libertarian Wins $400,00 in Suit for Libel |newspaper=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1981/04/23/us/civil-libertarian-wins-40000-in-suit-for-libel.html}}
Key causes of the JBS in the 1970s included opposition to both the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and to the establishment of diplomatic ties with the People's Republic of China. The JBS claimed that Nixon's visit to mainland China had "humiliated the American people and betrayed our anti-communist allies" and that it was the primary supplier of illicit heroin into the United States.{{cite book |last1=Hamilton |first1=Neil A. |title=The 1970s |date=2009 |publisher=Infobase Publishing |isbn=978-1-4381-0878-0 |page=87 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eANpoTtB4QwC |language=en}}{{cite news |last1=Clarity |first1=James F. |title=Wallace, Here to 'Test the Atmosphere,' Attacks President and Mayor |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1971/09/26/archives/wallace-here-to-test-the-atmosphere-attacks-president-and-mayor.html |access-date=1 October 2023 |work=The New York Times |date=26 September 1971}} The society also was opposed to transferring control of the Panama Canal from American to Panamanian sovereignty.{{cite news |last1=Hudson |first1=Richard |title=Storm Over the Canal |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/05/16/archives/storm-over-the-crnal-the-military-and-economic-importance-of-the.html |access-date=1 October 2023 |work=The New York Times |date=16 May 1976}}
During the 1970s, the Kuomintang in the Republic of China under Executive Yuan Premier Chiang Ching-kuo organized a people's diplomacy campaign in the United States in an effort to mobilize American political sentiment in opposition to the PRC through mass demonstrations and petitions.{{Cite book |last=Minami |first=Kazushi |title=People's Diplomacy: How Americans and Chinese Transformed US-China Relations during the Cold War |date=2024 |publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=9781501774157 |location=Ithaca, NY}}{{Rp|page=42}} Among these efforts, the John Birch Society worked with the KMT on a petition writing campaign through which Americans were urged to write their local government officials and ask them to "Cut the Red China connection."{{Rp|page=42}}
The John Birch Society, along with other conservative groups such as the Eagle Forum and the Christian right, successfully opposed the Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s.Ruth Murray Brown, For a Christian America: A History of the Religious Right (Prometheus Books, 2002), pp. 49-51.{{Cite book |last=Rhode |first=Deborah L. |title=Justice and Gender |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2009 |isbn=9780674042674 |pages=63, 70–71 |quote=[T]he John Birch Society perceived the amendment as an integral part of "Communist plans...at work in a now vast effort to reduce human beings to the same level as animals."}} JBS played a key role in stopping the ERA's ratification – on par with Phyllis Schlafly, herself a JBS member – and it organized opposition to it across the nation.{{rp|page=347–351}} JBS accused the ERA's supporters of subversion, asserting that the ERA was part of a Communist plot "to reduce human beings to living at the same level as animals."
The JBS advocated for lower taxes, including reducing the federal income tax rate. By 1977, it had established over 200 TRIM (Tax Relief Immediately) committees across the U.S.{{rp|page=361–64}} In the 1970s, the JBS also played a prominent role in promoting the false claim that laetrile was a cancer cure, and in advocating for the legalization of the compound as a drug.Richard D. Lyons, [https://www.nytimes.com/1977/07/05/archives/rightists-are-linked-to-laetriles-lobby-but-backers-of-purported.html Rightists Are Linked to Laetrile's Lobby, The New York Times (July 5, 1977).]Gerald E. Markle, James C. Petersen & Morton O.Wagenfeld, "Notes from the Cancer Underground: Participation in the Laetrile Movement," Social Science & Medicine (January 1978), Vol. 12: pp. 31-37. A New York Times review in 1977 found JBS and other far-right groups were involved in pro-laetrile campaigns in at least nine states. "Virtually all" of the officers of the "Committee for Freedom of Choice in Cancer Therapy," the leading pro-laetrile group, were JBS members. Congressman and Birch Society leader Lawrence P. McDonald was involved in the campaign as a member of the committee. The JBS opposed Earth Day, suggesting that it was a Communist plot and noting that the first celebration fell on the 100th anniversary of Vladimir Lenin's birth.
The JBS was organized into local chapters during this period. Ernest Brosang, a New Jersey regional coordinator, claimed that it was virtually impossible for opponents of the society to penetrate its policy-making levels, thereby protecting it from "anti-American" takeover attempts. Its activities included the distribution of literature critical of civil rights legislation, warnings over the influence of the United Nations, and the release of petitions to impeach United States Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren. To spread their message, members held showings of documentary films and operated initiatives such as "Let Freedom Ring", a nationwide network of recorded telephone messages.{{cite web|url=https://www.politico.com/story/2017/12/09/john-birch-society-founded-dec-9-1958-281369|title=John Birch Society founded Dec 9, 1958|publisher=Politico|first=Andrew|last=Glass|date=December 9, 2017|access-date=November 12, 2019}}{{cite web|url=http://www.jta.org/1967/01/09/archive/u-s-right-wing-group-disseminates-lies-against-weizmann-institute|title=US right-wing group disseminates lies against Weizmann Institute|publisher=Jewish Telegraphic Agency|date=January 9, 1967 |access-date=November 12, 2019}}
=1980s and 1990s=
After the Vietnam War, the JBS's membership and influence declined. This decline continued through the 1980s and 1990s due to Welch's death in 1985 (at age 85) and the end of the Cold War in 1991.Thomas Lansford, "John Birch Society" in Encyclopedia of American Religion and Politics (eds: Paul A. Djupe & Laura R. Olson; Facts on File, 2003), pp. 233-34.{{Sfn|Stewart|2002|p=425}} By the mid-1990s, membership in the JBS was estimated between 15,000 and 20,000.{{harvnb|Mulloy|2014|loc="Introduction"}}: "by the mid-1990s the figure was down to fifteen thousand or twenty thousand (estimates are all that are available because the Society declined to release its official membership rolls)." While other anti-Communist organizations faded away following the Cold War's end, the JBS survived and experienced some growth in the 1990s.{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=425-426; 441-444}} News reports said President George H.W. Bush's invocation of a "new world order" during the 1991 Gulf War gave the society a new audience.{{cite web | last=Lackmeyer | first=Steve | title=Birch Society Sees Plot In "New World Order" | website=The Oklahoman | date=January 20, 1992 | url=https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/1992/01/20/birch-society-sees-plot-in-new-world-order/62504757007/ | access-date=May 11, 2022}}{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=424–447}} The society consolidated its national office in Appleton, Wisconsin, the birthplace of Senator Joseph McCarthy.{{sfn|Stewart|2002|pp=423—447}}
In 1984, three members of the San Diego Padres, namely Eric Show, Mark Thurmond, and Dave Dravecky, revealed they were members of the JBS.{{cite web | last=Curtis | first=Bryan | title=Remembering Baseball's Right-Wing Rotation | website=The Ringer | date=October 31, 2017 | url=https://www.theringer.com/mlb/2017/10/31/16578390/padres-john-birch-society-mlb-alt-right | access-date=July 26, 2022}} The society campaigned against the ratification of the Genocide Convention, arguing it would erode U.S. national sovereignty.{{cite news |last1=Oberdorfer |first1=Don |last2=Cannon |first2=Lou |title=Administration Calls for Ratification of Treaty Against Genocide |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1984/09/06/administration-calls-for-ratification-of-treaty-against-genocide/c8c00984-79d6-4756-b05a-04795f2448ce/ |access-date=November 22, 2020 |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=September 6, 1984}}{{cite book |last1=Relations |first1=United States Congress Senate Committee on Foreign |title=Crime of Genocide: Hearing Before the Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate, Ninety-ninth Congress, First Session, on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, March 5, 1985 |year=1985 |publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LXDW64GKeg0C&q=%22Why+is+the+killing+of+a+million+a+lesser+crime+than+the+killing+of+a+single+individual%22 |language=en}} The JBS continued to press for an end to United States membership in the United Nations. As evidence of its effectiveness, the society pointed to the Utah State Legislature's failed resolution calling for United States withdrawal, as well as the actions of several other states where the society's membership was active.{{cite news|last1=Spangler |first1=Jerry |last2=Bernick |first2=Bob |date=June 16, 2003 |title=John Birch Society forges on in Utah|url=https://www.deseret.com/2003/6/16/19729070/john-birch-society-forges-on-in-utah|work=Deseret News}}
The second head of the JBS was Congressman Larry McDonald (D) from Georgia. McDonald's first wife "estimated that, over the years, he had hosted 10,000 people in his living room for Bircher-inspired lectures and documentaries."{{cite news|last1=Dorfman|first1=Zach|title=The Congressman Who Created His Own Deep State. Really.|url=https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2018/12/02/larry-mcdonald-communists-deep-state-222726|access-date=January 4, 2019|work=Politico|date=December 2, 2018}} In 1982, McDonald was appointed as national chairman of the Society. McDonald was killed in 1983 when airliner KAL 007 was shot down by a Soviet interceptor.
William P. Hoar, a writer for the JBS who has attacked mainstream politicians from Franklin D. Roosevelt to George W. Bush, published regularly in The New American and its predecessor American Opinion. He coauthored The Clinton Clique with Larry Abraham alleging that Bill Clinton was part of the Anglo-American conspiracy supposedly ruled through the Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission. The Birch Society publications arm, Western Islands, published his Architects of Conspiracy: An Intriguing History (1984), and Huntington House Publishers published his Handouts and Pickpockets: Our Government Gone Berserk (1996).see [http://www.claremont.org/contributor-list/213/ short biography from Claremont Review of Books]{{Better source needed|reason=The current source is insufficiently reliable (WP:NOTRS).|date=March 2022}}
In 1995, the JBS campaigned against plans for a Conference of States; proponents said such a conference would reduce federal powers. The JBS feared it would lead to a second Constitutional Convention.{{cite web | title=Birch Informant Decries 'Influence' of Big Business | website=Deseret News | date=May 30, 1995 | url=https://www.deseret.com/1995/5/30/19215195/birch-informant-decries-influence-of-big-business | access-date=August 23, 2022}}{{cite news | title=States Conference Encounters Resistance | newspaper=The Washington Post | date=March 27, 1995 | url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1995/03/27/states-conference-encounters-resistance/274ba62b-0f60-45da-8eb1-a0b59b719882/ | access-date=August 23, 2022}}{{cite web | title=States' Rights Meeting Coming Under Attack Right-Wingers Undermining Plans, Idaho Lawmaker Says | website=The Spokesman-Review | date=April 25, 1995 | url=https://www.spokesman.com/stories/1995/apr/25/states-rights-meeting-coming-under-attack-right/ | access-date=August 23, 2022}}{{cite news |last=Sullivan |first=Laurie |date=April 25, 1995 |title=States' Rights Backers Are Not Backing Down |work=The Salt Lake Tribune |location=Salt Lake City |page=D-2}}
= 2000–present =
In the mid-2000s, the JBS, along with the Eagle Forum, mobilized conservative opposition to a so-called North American Union and the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America. As a result of two organizations' activities, 23 state legislatures saw bills introduced condemning an NAU while the Bush and Obama administrations were deterred "from any grand initiatives."{{cite book | last=Pastor | first=Robert |author-link=Robert Pastor |title=The North American Idea: A Vision of a Continental Future | publisher=Oxford University Press, USA |publication-place=New York |year=2011 |isbn=978-0-19-978241-3 |oclc=741646639 |pages=11, 76}} In 2007, The New American published a special issue devoted to the topic; approximately 500,000 copies were distributed.{{cite journal |title=The North American Union Right-Wing Populist Conspiracism Rebounds |journal=Political Research Associates |date=March 10, 2008 |url=https://politicalresearch.org/2008/03/10/the-north-american-union-right-wing-populist-conspiracism-rebounds-2 |access-date=April 22, 2022 |last1=Berlet |first1=Chip}} The JBS also advocated for U.S. withdrawal from the UN.{{cite web |last1=Spangler |first1=Jerry D. | last2=Bernick |first2=Bob Jr. |title=John Birch Society forges on in Utah |website=Deseret News |date=June 16, 2003 | url=https://www.deseret.com/2003/6/16/19729070/john-birch-society-forges-on-in-utah |access-date=July 26, 2022}} The JBS was a co-sponsor of the 2010 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), ending its decades-long distance from the mainstream conservative movement.{{cite news |last=Just |first=Sara |title=Far-Right John Birch Society 2010 |url=http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2010/02/farright-john-birch-society-2010.html |work=ABC News |date=February 19, 2010 |access-date=February 6, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100221132221/http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2010/02/farright-john-birch-society-2010.html |archive-date=February 21, 2010 |url-status=dead}}{{cite book |author=Sam Tanenhaus |title=The Death of Conservatism: A Movement and Its Consequences |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RW6NcqD5bFoC&pg=PA121 |date=October 19, 2010 |publisher=Random House Digital, Inc. |isbn=978-0-8129-8103-2 |page=121}}{{cite web |last=Leonard |first=Collin |title=Is this the death of the John Birch Society - or its renaissance? |website=Deseret News |date=February 22, 2023 |url=https://www.deseret.com/23563059/john-birch-society-comeback |access-date=March 7, 2023}} It attended CPAC again in 2023{{cite web |last=Niquette |first=Mark |title=Donald Trump Is a Star Among Ultra-Conservatives, But He Faces a New Test |website=Bloomberg.com |date=March 2, 2023 | url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-03-02/trump-cpac-appearance-aimed-at-fending-off-desantis |access-date=March 7, 2023 | quote=Nearby, conference-goers could pick up Ginger Betty Bakery’s $8 gingerbread Trump-shaped cookies while browsing booths set up by groups including the John Birch Society and Moms For America.}} and 2024.{{cite web |last=Mondeaux |first=Cami |title=CPAC 2024: Once a Republican bastion, annual gathering brings fringe movement to the mainstream |website=Washington Examiner |date=February 24, 2024 |url=https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/2873188/cpac-2024-republican-bastion-fringe-movement-mainstream/ |access-date=February 27, 2024}}
In 2005, Robert Welch University, renamed from John Birch University in the 1990s, was approved as an online university by the Wisconsin Educational Approval Board, granting two-year associates' degrees.{{Cite news |date=March 7, 2005 |title=Online university gets state approval |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/green-bay-press-gazette-online-universit/168638211/ |access-date=March 23, 2025 |work=Green Bay Press-Gazette |pages=B2 |via=Newspapers.com}} On June 15, 2007, the university had its first graduating class.{{Cite news |date=June 30, 2007 |title=Robert Welch University |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-post-crescent-robert-welch-universit/168638367/ |access-date=March 23, 2025 |work=The Post-Crescent |pages=A5}} {{As of|2025}}, the university states its two-year program is paused while it works to develop a four-year degree program.{{Cite web |title=Robert Welch University |url=http://robertwelchuniversity.org/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250220100737/http://robertwelchuniversity.org/ |archive-date=February 20, 2025 |access-date=March 23, 2025 |website=Robert Welch University}}
Although JBS membership numbers are kept private, it reported a resurgence of members in the 2010s and 2020s, specifically in Texas.{{cite web |last=Monacelli |first=Steven | title=The John Birch Society Sees a Renaissance in North Texas |website=The Texas Observer |date=July 21, 2022 |url=https://www.texasobserver.org/the-john-birch-society-sees-a-renaissance-in-north-texas/ |access-date=August 23, 2022}}{{cite web | last=Downen | first=Robert | title=At Texas GOP convention, Republicans call for spiritual warfare |website=The Texas Tribune |date=May 28, 2024 | url=https://www.texastribune.org/2024/05/28/texas-gop-convention-elections-religion-delegates-platform/ | access-date=May 28, 2024}} A 2017 article in Politico describing the group's activities in Texas listed some of its stances as opposing the UN's Agenda 21 based on a conspiracy theory that it will "establish control over all human activity", opposing a bill that would allow people who entered the United States illegally to pay in-state college tuition, pulling the United States out of NAFTA, returning America to what the group calls its Christian foundations, and abolishing the federal departments of education and energy. In 2012, the Tennessee House of Representatives passed an anti-Agenda 21 resolution with nearly identical wording as a JBS model resolution.{{cite web | last=Humphrey | first=Matt | title=Tennessee Republicans Copy John Birch Society Model Legislation on Agenda 21 | website=Right Wing Watch | date=March 16, 2012 | url=https://www.rightwingwatch.org/post/tennessee-republicans-copy-john-birch-society-model-legislation-on-agenda-21/ | access-date=January 17, 2024}}{{cite web | last=Sher | first=Andy | title=U.N.'s Agenda 21 sparks bitter debate in Tennessee House | website=Chattanooga Times Free Press | date=March 15, 2012 | url=https://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2012/mar/15/uns-agenda-21-sparks-bitter-debate-tennessee-house/ | access-date=January 17, 2024}}
With Donald Trump's election in 2016, the JBS "saw many of its core instincts finally reflected in the White House." Political commentator Jeet Heer argued in 2016 that "Trumpism" is essentially Bircherism, and journalist Andrew Reinbach called the JBS "the intellectual seed bank of the right."{{cite news|last1=Reinbach |first1=Andrew|date=September 12, 2011|title=The John Birch Society's Reality |url=https://www.huffpost.com/entry/john-birch-society_b_958207|access-date=December 6, 2023|work=The Huffington Post}} Trump confidant and longtime advisor Roger Stone said that Trump's father Fred Trump was a financier of the JBS and a personal friend of founder Robert Welch.{{cite news|last1=Newman|first1=Alex|title=Deep State "Plan C" Is to Kill Trump, Advisor Roger Stone Warns|url=https://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/politics/item/27847-deep-state-plan-c-is-to-kill-trump-advisor-roger-stone-warns|access-date=January 5, 2019|work=The New American|date=January 1, 2018}} Trump's former Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney was the speaker at the John Birch Society's National Council dinner shortly before joining the Trump administration.{{cite magazine|last1=Levy|first1=Pema|title=Trump's Budget Director Pick Spoke at a John Birch Society Event|url=https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/12/trump-mulvaney-john-birch-society/|access-date=January 5, 2019|magazine=The New Republic|date=December 19, 2016}} Former Congressman Ron Paul (R-Texas) has had a long and close relationship with the JBS, celebrating its work in his 2008 keynote speech at its 50th anniversary event and saying that the JBS was leading the fight to restore freedom.{{cite news|last1=Farmer|first1=Brian|title=Ron Paul Addresses John Birch Society|url=https://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/constitution/item/7623-ron-paul-addresses-john-birch-society|access-date=January 5, 2019|work=The New American|date=October 8, 2008}}{{Self-published inline|date=October 2021}}{{Cite magazine |last=Kirchick |first=James |date=February 27, 2009 |title=Yes, Ron Paul Is A Bircher |magazine=The New Republic |url=https://newrepublic.com/article/48087/yes-ron-paul-bircher |access-date=April 2, 2022 |issn=0028-6583}} The keynote speaker at the organization's 60th anniversary celebration was Congressman Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky), who maintained a near-perfect score on the JBS's "Freedom Index" ranking of members of Congress.{{cite news|last1=Newman|first1=Alex|title=At John Birch Society's 60th Anniversary, Lawmakers Speak Out|url=https://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/constitution/item/30262-at-john-birch-society-s-60th-anniversary-lawmakers-speak-out|access-date=January 5, 2019|work=The New American|date=October 8, 2018}}{{Self-published inline|date=October 2021}} Right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, who hosted Trump on his InfoWars radio show and claimed to have a personal relationship with the president, called Trump a "John Birch Society president",Archived at [https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/F5CWCIZ01oI Ghostarchive]{{cbignore}} and the [https://web.archive.org/web/20200608031217/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F5CWCIZ01oI&gl=US&hl=en Wayback Machine]{{cbignore}}: {{cite AV media |people=Jones, Alex (host) |date=December 3, 2018 |title=Infowars |medium=radio/tv broadcast |language=en |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F5CWCIZ01oI |access-date=January 5, 2018 |location=Austin, Texas |publisher=Infowars}}{{cbignore}} and previously said Trump was "more John Birch Society than the John Birch Society."Archived at [https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/wUt7tqsLtW0 Ghostarchive]{{cbignore}} and the [https://web.archive.org/web/20200613035419/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wUt7tqsLtW0&gl=US&hl=en Wayback Machine]{{cbignore}}: {{cite AV media |people=Jones, Alex (host) |date=January 10, 2017 |title=Infowars |medium=radio/tv broadcast |language=en |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wUt7tqsLtW0 |access-date=January 5, 2018 |location=Austin, Texas |publisher=Infowars}}{{cbignore}}{{Better source needed|date=October 2021}} Former JBS CEO Arthur R. Thompson stated, "The bulk of Trump’s campaign was Birch".{{Cite web |last=Sullivan |first=Tim |date=January 21, 2024 |title=In small-town Wisconsin, looking for the roots of the modern American conspiracy theory |url=https://apnews.com/article/conspiracy-theory-government-john-birch-c3809b7ad45afc3bee5f9881b2d9aa36 |access-date=September 19, 2024 |website=AP News}} Trump's talk of a deep state has been described as "repeating a longtime Birch talking point." In July 2021, the Republican central committees of Kootenai County, Idaho, and Benewah County, Idaho, unanimously approved resolutions calling JBS "a valuable organization that is dedicated to restoring the Republic according to the vision of the Founding Fathers."{{cite news | last1=Hardy | first1=Madison | title=Embracing Birch | url=https://cdapress.com/news/2021/jul/29/republican-central-committee-stands-support-john-b/ | date=July 29, 2021 | newspaper=Coeur d'Alene Press | access-date=September 23, 2021}} The Idaho Republican Party declined to endorse the resolutions,{{cite web | last1=Hardy | first1=Madison | title=Idaho GOP bursts Bircher bubble | url= https://cdapress.com/news/2021/sep/03/idaho-gop-denies-birch/ | date=September 3, 2021 | work=Coeur d'Alene Press | access-date=September 23, 2021}} though the party elected a JBS member, Dorothy Moon, as chair in July 2022.{{cite news |last1=Moseley-Morris |first1=Kelcie |title=Rep. Dorothy Moon becomes new chairwoman of Idaho Republican Party |url=https://idahocapitalsun.com/2022/07/16/rep-dorothy-moon-becomes-new-chairwoman-of-idaho-republican-party/ |work=Idaho Capital Sun |date=July 16, 2022 |access-date=January 7, 2023}} The JBS had been active in Idaho.{{cite web | last1=Baker | first1=Mike | title=A Fracture in Idaho's G.O.P. as the Far Right Seeks Control | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/15/us/idaho-republican-primary-little-mcgeachin.html | date=May 17, 2022 | work=The New York Times | access-date=November 3, 2022}}{{cite web | last1=Smith | first1=David | title='Republican and more Republican': Idaho shifts ever rightward | url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/11/iowa-right-wing-republicans | date=May 11, 2022 | work=The Guardian | access-date=November 3, 2022 | quote=...elections for other offices of state are more competitive between the hard right and harder right. ... Dorothy Moon, a member of the far-right John Birch Society, is a contender for secretary of state.}}
In the early 2020s, the JBS campaigned against carbon-capture pipelines in Iowa, arguing they threatened property rights.{{cite web | last=Kurt | first=Dylan | title='This is winnable' | website=manchesterpress.com | date=June 13, 2022 | url=https://www.manchesterpress.com/news/this-is-winnable/article_c2ad7e88-efb3-5eaf-9865-79bf43f6b1e4.html | access-date=November 3, 2022}}{{cite web | first1=Elijah | last1=Helton | title=Unlikely allies leading anti-pipeline fight | website=The N'West Iowa REVIEW | date=July 16, 2022 | url=https://www.nwestiowa.com/news/unlikely-allies-leading-anti-pipeline-fight/article_7ea7409e-0467-11ed-ac26-17f2f9cceb70.html | access-date=November 3, 2022}}{{cite web | last=Shelhart | first=Cheri | title=John Birch Society hosts meeting against carbon storage proposals | website=Kankakee Valley Post News | date=October 4, 2023 | url=https://www.newsbug.info/kankakee_valley_post_news/news/local/john-birch-society-hosts-meeting-against-carbon-storage-proposals/article_ba9c6fe2-6236-11ee-b1ea-93a47157f854.html | access-date=October 24, 2023}} The JBS is affiliated with FreedomProject Academy, an online school "based on Judeo-Christian values." Between 2011 and 2020, its enrollment grew from 22 to 1,000 students. The JBS publishes the Freedom Index, which rates members of Congress and state legislators "based on their adherence to constitutional principles of limited government, fiscal responsibility, national sovereignty and a traditional foreign policy of avoiding foreign entanglements."{{cite web | last=Wolfson | first=Leo | title=John Birch Society Says Wyoming Part Of Conservative Resurgence | website=Your Wyoming News Source | date=August 17, 2023 | url=https://cowboystatedaily.com/2023/08/17/john-birch-society-says-wyoming-part-of-conservative-resurgence/ | access-date=August 31, 2023}}
Officers
{{more citations needed|section|date=December 2019}}
=Chairmen and presidents=
- Robert W. Welch Jr. (1958–1983)
- Larry McDonald (1983), a U.S. Representative who was killed in the KAL-007 shootdown incident
- Robert W. Welch Jr. (1983–1985)
- Charles R. Armour (1985–1991)
- John F. McManus (1991–2004)
- G. Vance Smith (2004–2005)
- John F. McManus (2005–2016)
- Ray Clark (2016–2019){{cite web |url=http://www.jbs.org/mobile/mobile-about/mobile-leadership |title=The John Birch Society Leadership |publisher=John Birch Society |access-date=September 21, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161011034312/http://www.jbs.org/mobile/mobile-about/mobile-leadership |archive-date=October 11, 2016 |url-status=dead}}
- Martin Ohlson (since 2019){{cite web |url=http://search.sunbiz.org/Inquiry/CorporationSearch/GetDocument?aggregateId=fornp-f05000007289-001bb50f-941b-47aa-899b-b3347bac7735&transactionId=f05000007289-e80d39cb-3c31-4a7a-bb1b-f50d59a88cd2&formatType=PDF |title=2019 FOREIGN NOT FOR PROFIT CORPORATION ANNUAL REPORT Entity Name:THE JOHN BIRCH SOCIETY INCORPORATED|work=sunbiz.org |publisher=Florida Department of State |date=February 22, 2019 |access-date=August 9, 2020 |quote=Title PRESIDENT Name OHLSON, MARTIN P}}
=CEOs=
- G. Allen Bubolz (1988–1991)
- G. Vance Smith (1991–2005)
- Arthur R. Thompson (2005–2020)
- Bill Hahn (2020–2024)
- Wayne Morrow (2024–present){{cite web |url=https://jbs.org/about/leadership/ |title=The John Birch Society Leadership Team|publisher=John Birch Society |access-date=August 29, 2020}}
In popular culture
- Pete Seeger lampooned the John Birch Society with a song called "The Jack Ash Society", recorded on his 1961 Folkways Records LP album Gazette Vol. 2. The name is a pun. On the surface, it changes the name from one type of tree, birch to another, ash. However, the name Jack Ash also sounds like the word jackass meaning 'a foolish person'.{{Cite web |last=Ruhlmann |first=William |title=Gazette, Vol. 2 - Pete Seeger |url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/gazette-vol-2-mr0002873253 |access-date=2024-03-12 |website=AllMusic}}
- In 1962, Bob Dylan recorded "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues", which poked fun at the society and its tendency to see Communist conspiracies in many situations. When he attempted to perform it on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1963, however, CBS's Standards and Practices department forbade it, fearing that lyrics equating the Society's views with those of Adolf Hitler might trigger a defamation lawsuit. Dylan was offered the opportunity to perform a different song, but he responded that if he could not sing the number of his choice he would rather not appear at all. The story generated widespread media attention in the days that followed; Sullivan denounced the network's decision in published interviews.{{Cite web |last= |date=May 11, 2021 |title=Bob Dylan walks out on "The Ed Sullivan Show" |url=https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/bob-dylan-walks-out-on-the-ed-sullivan-show |access-date=2024-03-12 |website=HISTORY}}
- Pogo cartoonist Walt Kelly lampooned the American anti-Communist movement, and the John Birch Society in particular, in a series of strips collected in 1962 in The Jack Acid Society Black Book.{{Cite news |last=Cart |first=Michael |date=March 15, 2012 |title=Carte Blanche: My Choice for President |pages=51 |work=Booklist}}{{Cite journal |last=Dussere |first=E. |date=March 2003 |title=Subversion in the Swamp: Pogo and the Folk in the McCarthy Era |journal=Journal of American Culture |volume=26 |issue=1 |pages=134–141 |doi=10.1111/1542-734X.00081}}
- In 1962 The Chad Mitchell Trio recorded a satirical song, "The John Birch Society", which made its way to no. 99 in the Billboard Hot 100.{{Cite magazine |last= |date=2013-01-02 |title=Billboard Hot 100: May 19, 1962 |url=https://www.billboard.com/charts/hot-100/ |access-date=2024-03-12 |magazine=Billboard}}
- When jazz trumpeter John Birks "Dizzy" Gillespie launched a joke presidential campaign in 1963, fans created a "John Birks Society" to campaign for him.{{cite book|author=Clarence Lusane|title=The Black History of the White House|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9khHvNKPv8cC&pg=PT332|date=23 January 2013|publisher=City Lights Books|isbn=978-0-87286-611-9|pages=332–}}
- In the 1964 film Dr. Strangelove, a deranged U.S. Air Force general claims that water fluoridation would "sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids" and is part of a communist conspiracy, a parody of JBS claims.{{Cite web |last=Bailey |first=Ronald |date=2001-12-05 |title=Impurifying our precious bodily fluids |url=https://reason.com/2001/12/05/impurifying-our-precious-bodil/ |access-date=2022-11-14 |website=Reason |language=en-US}}
- The 1973 song "Uneasy Rider" by Charlie Daniels contains a reference to "Brother John Birch" in the lyrics.{{cite web | title=Uneasy Rider | url=https://genius.com/Charlie-daniels-uneasy-rider-lyrics | work=Genius | access-date=October 7, 2021}}
- In 2020, American journalist Robert Evans released a multi-part series on his podcast Behind the Bastards entitled "How The John Birch Society Invented the Modern Far Right".{{cite web | last1=Evans | first1=Robert | title=Part One: How The John Birch Society Invented The Modern Far Right | url=https://www.stitcher.com/show/behind-the-bastards/episode/part-one-how-the-john-birch-society-invented-the-modern-far-right-80165219 | date=December 15, 2020 | work=Stitcher | access-date=October 7, 2021}}
See also
{{Portal|Conservatism|Libertarianism|United States}}
References
{{Reflist}}
General and cited references
{{Refbegin}}
- {{Cite book|last=Mulloy|first=D. J.|year=2014|title=The World of the John Birch Society: Conspiracy, Conservatism, and the Cold War|publisher=Vanderbilt University Press|location=Nashville |isbn=978-0826519818 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RHHYAwAAQBAJ}}
- {{cite book |last1=Mulloy |first1=D. J. |date=2014a |chapter=1. exposure |pages=15–41 |title=The World of the John Birch Society: Conspiracy, Conservatism, and the Cold War |publisher=Vanderbilt University Press |doi=10.2307/j.ctv1675660 |jstor=j.ctv1675660 |isbn=9780826519818}}
- {{Cite journal |last1=Stewart |first1=Charles J. |date=2002 |title=The Master Conspiracy of the John Birch Society: From Communism to the New World Order |journal=Western Journal of Communication |volume=66 |issue=4 |pages=423–447 |doi=10.1080/10570310209374748 |s2cid=145081268}}
- {{cite thesis |type=PhD |last=Verhoeven |first=Bart |date=July 2015 |title=The Rearguard of Freedom: The John Birch Society and the Development of Modern Conservatism in the United States, 1958–1968 |url=http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28893/1/VerhoevenThesisNottinghamFinalVersion.pdf |access-date=2023-09-26 |publisher=University of Nottingham}}
{{Refend}}
Further reading
=Scholarly studies=
- {{cite book |last = Lautz |first = Terry E |year = 2016 |title = John Birch: A Life |publisher = Oxford University Press| location = New York |isbn = 978-0190262891}}
- McGirr, Lisa. Suburban Warriors: The Origins of the New American Right (2001), focus on Los Angeles suburbs in 1960s
- Schoenwald, Jonathan M. (2002). A Time for Choosing: The Rise of Modern American Conservatism pp. 62–99 [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0195157265/ excerpt and text search], a national history of the party
- Stone, Barbara S. "The John Birch Society: a Profile", Journal of Politics 1974 36(1): 184–197, {{JSTOR|2129115}}.
- Wander, Philip. "The John Birch and Martin Luther King, Symbols in the Radical Right", Western Speech (Western Journal of Communication), 1971 35(1): 4–14.
- Wilcox, Clyde. "Sources of Support for the Old Right: A Comparison of the John Birch Society and the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade". Social Science History 1988 12(4): 429–450, {{JSTOR|1171382}}.
- Wright, Stuart A. Patriots, politics, and the Oklahoma City Bombing. Cambridge University Press. 2007. {{ISBN|978-0-521-87264-5}}.
=Primary sources=
- Gary Allen. None Dare Call It Conspiracy. G S G & Associates, Inc., 1971.
- {{cite book | last=Griffin | first=G. Edward| author-link=G. Edward Griffin | title=This is the John Birch Society; an invitation to membership | publisher=American Media | publication-place=Thousand Oaks, Calif | year=1972 | isbn=0-912986-04-2 | oclc=2192524}}
- {{cite book |last=McManus |first=John F. | title=The John Birch Society: Its History Recounted by Someone Who Was There | url=https://shopjbs.org/the-john-birch-society-its-history-recounted-by-someone-who-was-there | publisher=Overview Productions | location=Wakefield, Massachusetts | year=2018 | isbn =978-0692132968}}
- Robert W. Welch Jr. The New Americanism and Other Speeches. Boston: Western Islands, 1966.
- {{cite book |first=Robert |last=Welch |author-link=Robert W. Welch Jr. |title=The blue book of the John Birch Society |publisher=Western Islands |location=Boston |year=1961 |isbn=0-88279-105-2 |oclc=16903114 |url=https://archive.org/details/bluebookofjohnbi00welc}}
- {{cite book|first=Robert |last=Welch |author-link=Robert W. Welch Jr. |title=The Politician |year=1964 |publisher=Belmont Publishing |location=Belmont, Massachusetts |oclc=376165|isbn=99908-64-98-5}}
- {{cite book|first=Robert |last=Welch |author-link=Robert W. Welch Jr. |title=The White Book of the John Birch Society for 1964 |year=1964 |publisher=John Birch Society |location=Belmont, Massachusetts |oclc=21571870}}
- {{cite book|first=Robert |last=Welch |author-link=Robert W. Welch Jr. |title=The New Americanism and Other Speeches |publisher=Western Islands |location=Boston |year=1966 |isbn=0-88279-211-3}}
==Criticizing the John Birch Society==
- Buckley, William F. Jr. (March 2008). [https://www.commentary.org/articles/william-buckley-jr/goldwater-the-john-birch-society-and-me/ "Goldwater, the John Birch Society, and Me"]. Commentary.
- {{Cite book |last=Conner |first=Claire |year=2013 |title=Wrapped in the Flag: A Personal History of America's Radical Right |location=Boston |publisher=Beacon Press |isbn=978-0807077504 |oclc=930959176}}
- De Koster, Lester (1967). The Citizen and the John Birch Society. A Reformed Journal monograph. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans.
- Epstein, Benjamin R., and Arnold Forster (1966). The Radical Right: Report on the John Birch Society and Its Allies. New York: Vintage Books.
- Grove, Gene (1961). Inside the John Birch Society. Greenwich, CT: Fawcett.
- Grupp, Fred W. Jr. (1969). "The Political Perspectives of Birch Society Members". In Robert A. Schoenberger, ed., The American Right Wing: Readings in Political Behavior. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. {{Oclc|470572700}}.
- Hardisty, Jean V. (1999). Mobilizing Resentment: Conservative Resurgence from the John Birch Society to the Promise Keepers. Boston: Beacon Press.
External links
{{Commons category}}
- {{Official website}}
- [https://thenewamerican.com/ The New American], JBS biweekly publication which publishes the [http://www.thenewamerican.com/freedomindex/ Freedom Index] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170827164100/http://www.thenewamerican.com/freedomindex/ |date=August 27, 2017}} congressional scorecard twice a year
- [http://www.publiceye.org/tooclose/jbs.html John Birch Society] at Political Research Associates
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dg6ixwmcMcc "What Is the John Birch Society?"], short excerpt of a film, released c. 1965, of Robert W. Welch Jr., explaining why he founded the John Birch Society and its aims
- [http://votesmart.org/interest-group/1627/the-john-birch-society Rating group positions by year] at Project Vote Smart
{{Portal bar|Conservatism|Libertarianism|United States}}
{{authority control}}
Category:1958 establishments in Indiana
Category:Anti-communist organizations in the United States
Category:Conservative political advocacy groups in the United States
Category:Far-right organizations in the United States
Category:Organizations established in 1958
Category:Paleoconservative organizations
Category:Political organizations based in the United States
Category:Politics and race in the United States