The New York Times is hailing and promoting the return to the political arena of scandal-tainted Ralph Reed, the 49-year-old Christian right leader and Bilderberg figure who first rose to power and wide-reaching influence as the founding executive director of evangelist Pat Robertson’s Christian Coalition.
The Times focused on Reed’s new incarnation as the founder of a non-profit political advocacy group known as the Faith and Freedom Coalition that Reed says will build a direct-mail and fundraising file of some 29 million conservative voters. Reed and his operation will undoubtedly be a major force in directing the aims and agenda of the tea party movement in the days ahead.
Within the next two years, Reed brags that he expects to spend $15 million to $18 million pushing a political agenda that is essentially designed to maintain control of the substantial evangelical voting bloc in America.
This, of course, means that these voters will be under the sway of Reed’s behind-the-scenes masters. You see, Reed is a tried and true inductee into the international global elite as demonstrated by the fact that in 2004 he attended the Bilderberg group’s 50th anniversary meeting in Stresa, Italy. Reed’s attendance was a clear sign that he has the sponsorship of some of the world’s most powerful families and financial groups.