The church, which sits off a two-lane, 75-mph highway, draws most
of its members from nearby Cisco, Texas, a town of 3,800 filled with
empty storefronts, idled derricks and beat-up houses. Church
doctrine considers being gay a serious crime, the Bible to be
historically and scientifically accurate in every detail and
abortion to be murder, including in cases of rape or incest.
Wilks bowed his head and closed his eyes. “We lament and mourn the
great sin of our nation, the many millions of babies murdered, and
we pray that you turn these people away from this evil,” he said.
A slide flashed above the altar on the church’s movie screen with
instructions on how to sign a petition asking Congress to cut off
federal funding for Planned Parenthood, the women's health care
agency that provides abortions and other medical services.
Cisco has two stoplights but 10 churches. So it isn’t unusual for
residents to turn to their pastors for guidance. What is out of the
ordinary is for that pastor to also be a billionaire. Farris Wilks,
63, and his younger brother Dan, 59, made a fortune in the recent
oil-and-gas drilling boom.
Also setting Farris Wilks apart is a little-noticed filing with the
Federal Election Commission in July that showed he and Dan, together
with their wives, had given $15 million to a Super PAC backing
Republican presidential contender Ted Cruz.
The Cruz donation makes the largely unknown Wilks family the biggest
donors in the 2016 race for the White House. So far, they have even
outspent the billionaire Koch brothers, who have vowed to use their
Freedom Partners network of conservative donors to pour $1 billion
into the election.
"We support (Cruz) because he believes in the morality of the free
market, in keeping our country safe, and in the right of the unborn
not to be killed in their mother’s womb," Farris Wilks said in an
email to Reuters, speaking on behalf of the Wilks family.
Cruz declined comment for this story.
GOD'S WILL
The bricklayer-turned-billionaire brothers grew up in a goat shed
and now have their own private airport and plane. Their emergence as
major players in the 2016 election speaks to the seismic shift that
has taken place in U.S. campaign finance since the Supreme Court’s
2010 decision in the Citizens United case, which changed the way
political campaigns are run and paid for.
The ruling opened the way for corporations, unions and the rich to
spend unlimited sums of money in support of pet candidates and
policies. In the case of the Wilks brothers, it potentially allows a
small church entry into the highest level of national politics - the
U.S. presidential election.
In sermons, recordings of which were reviewed by Reuters, Farris
Wilks has called homosexuality “a perversion tantamount to
bestiality, pedophilia and incest.” “It’s a predatorial lifestyle in
that they need your children, and straight people having kids, to
fulfill their sexual habits,” he said.
Climate change, he says, is God’s will. “If (God) wants the polar
caps to remain in place, then he will leave them there,” he told
congregants at a service in July 2013.
Farris has always preached, taking over the church from his father,
Voy, who founded it. Women have to “keep silence” during assemblies
and are advised to adhere to a dress code of no cleavage, bare skin,
tank tops or skirts above the knee.
Farris’s brother Dan funds and attends a conservative Christian
church founded by his father-in-law, which, with its theatrical
lighting, smoke machines, rock band and darkened auditorium, has the
feel of a nightclub.
The Wilkses say their support for Cruz is motivated by their
political beliefs, not their religious convictions. Together with
Cruz they share a passion for unbridled markets and are skeptical of
the IRS and of scientific findings that climate change is man-made.
"I’m endorsing Ted Cruz for President because I agree with his
policies and because he has guts," Farris Wilks said in the email.
"The truth is, Ted Cruz has never been to our church or endorsed any
of our specific doctrines, nor have we asked him to. The beliefs we
have in common are political beliefs."
BROTHERS HELP KENTUCKY CLERK
IRS filings show the brothers' political activism is, however,
driven in part by their religious beliefs.
The brothers each started non-profits in 2011, which together have
$270 million on hand. They have funded groups on the Christian right
that want to ban gay marriage and abortion.
Farris' donations include $922,000 to the evangelical group the
American Family Association as well as $1.5 million to Liberty
Counsel. The Counsel is a conservative legal nonprofit that came to
the aid of a Kentucky clerk who was jailed last week for refusing to
issue gay marriage licenses.
The brothers’ political giving has also intersected with their own
economic agenda as frackers.
Last year in Denton, Texas, residents voted to ban fracking after
growing concerned about the polluted air and water that some
scientists associate with the technique. The Wilks brothers poured
$800,000 into political campaign contributions to finance state
legislators who opposed the ban, according to Texas campaign filings
and women’s health website rhrealitycheck.org.
The effort culminated in May, when Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed
a bill forbidding Texas cities and towns from banning hydraulic
fracturing.
All 21 of the Texas legislators who received money from the Wilks
brothers voted for the bill.
EVERYMAN BILLIONAIRES
Success came late for the brothers. After high school, they became
bricklayers and struggled financially. Cisco residents remember them
begging for credit at the carpet store and auto dealership.
In 2002, as the Texas natural gas boom was under way, the brothers
founded Frac Tech Services, which provided trucks to frackers. It
succeeded almost overnight, and in 2011 they sold their majority
stake to a consortium led by a Singaporean sovereign wealth fund for
$3.2 billion.
They doled out generous bonuses to employees and started pouring
their largesse into Cisco: the town has a plush new espresso-serving
community center and sprawling sports complex.
[to top of second column] |
Since 2011, the Wilkses have been on a land buying binge, purchasing
hundreds of thousands of acres of ranch land in Texas, Idaho, and
Montana, where, according to local land records, they have become
the largest private landowners in the state.
Despite their wealth, the brothers are known locally for their
everyman ways in a place where the newspaper’s motto is “Fear God”
and raffle winners are awarded rifles. Farris, who still likes to
wear jeans, work boots and a baseball cap, is partial to the 2 for
$1.61 burritos at the Stripes gas station; Dan still rearranges
chairs at local community gatherings.
“Farris is the dirt farmer. Dan has more Hollywood in him,” said Dan
Griffith, who knows the brothers and owns a local shop that sells
Wild West memorabilia and Confederate battle flags from the U.S.
Civil War.
After a recent church service, Farris, dressed in a crisp blue dress
shirt and black slacks, politely declined an interview request,
saying, “I just don’t feel good about it. But I’m sorry for all the
trouble you’ve gone to.”
The brothers, who have 17 children between them, have built
palatial, gated compounds that stick out in the flat landscape of
horse pastures and discarded farm equipment. Farris’ oversized pool
has a huge cross on the bottom. The properties are surrounded by
walls of steel fencing and state-of-the-art surveillance technology.
The brothers also employ a private security force, in Cadillac
Escalades, made up of former federal agents and active local and
county police officers, some of whom flash their government badges
when on duty for the family.
The Wilkses trace their support for Cruz back to their humble
beginnings.
"America has always been a land of opportunity. It’s the one place
on earth where you can go from building brick walls in the Texas
heat to the kind of success my brother and I have achieved," Farris
Wilks told Reuters.
"Ted Cruz believes in the opportunity society, he believes in the
dignity of hard work, and he’s not afraid to fight for what he
believes in.”
The Wilkses are not the only billionaires backing Cruz. Reclusive
hedge fund magnate Robert Mercer gave $11 million; Texas energy
investor Toby Neugebauer gave $10 million. Mercer has declined to
comment on why he is supporting Cruz, while Neugebauer backs Cruz
for his track record promoting conservative causes and opposing the
federal debt.
Despite the large donations, Cruz is not among the leaders of the
Republican race. A Reuters/Ipsos poll on Sept. 8 showed him in
fourth place among Republican voters at 5.5 percent, tied with
former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee and Wisconsin Governor Scott
Walker.
PRAYING FOR CRUZ
The day after President Barack Obama won a second term, “I was
pretty bummed out,” Farris Wilks told congregants in a sermon on
Nov. 7, 2012, a recording of which was provided by Peter Montgomery,
a senior fellow with the equal rights group People for the American
Way. “I do believe that our country died that Tuesday night,” Wilks
said.
Less than a year later, Farris found himself in the ballroom of the
Marriott Hotel in Des Moines, Iowa, where Cruz stood with head bowed
in a prayer circle, surrounded by evangelical Christians.
Cruz was among the political headliners at a Pastors and Pews
conference, an annual, closed-door affair that now occurs in roughly
14 states and is organized by Christian nationalist David Lane.
The born-again Lane, a self-described former “wild man” of “drugs,
wine, women and song,” believes the Bible should be the primary
textbook in public schools and that judges who favor same-sex
marriage should be impeached. He says people who embrace homosexual
marriage, along with “pagan public schools, pagan higher learning
and pagan media,” are creating America’s downfall with their
“multiracial false gods.”
One of Lane’s major aims is to motivate at least 1,000 pastors to
run for office in 2016. Polling shows there are 65 million to 80
million evangelical Christians but only a quarter of them vote.
Getting 5 percent more registered and voting would, according to
Lane, put a conservative in the White House.
Asked about the Wilks brothers' financial support for Cruz, Lane
said in an interview: "It’s God’s money. He entrusted it to them.
They are being a steward. These are patriots of America trying to do
something right."
Dan Wilks’ nonprofit, the Heavenly Father’s Foundation, helped
bankroll the Des Moines gathering, donating $750,000 to Pastors and
Pews, federal tax filings show.
Though the election was three years off, the talk at the meeting,
according to four people who attended the event, was of 2016 — and
Cruz.
The Wilks family contributions have helped put Cruz in second place
($46 million) in the money race among Republicans seeking their
party’s nomination for 2016. Only Jeb Bush, who has raked in a
record $114.5 million, has raised more.
"They aren’t doing it to be famous or to be part of a club,"
billionaire Cruz backer Neugebauer said of the Wilks. "They know
that America is running out of IOUs, and they want this country’s
economic opportunities to still be here for their grandchildren.”
For more on the 2016 presidential race, see the Reuters blog, “Tales
from the Trail” (http://blogs.reuters.com/talesfromthetrail/).
(Additional reporting by Mike Wood and Grant Smith, Editing by
Michael Williams and Ross Colvin)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |