President Donald Trump’s task force to investigate "anti-Christian bias" in the federal government published a report on April 30 that criticized former President Joe Biden's administration for what it characterized as actions and policies that negatively impacted Christians around the country.

Several advocacy groups challenged the report's findings, describing them as deceptive and contradictory.

Trump established the task force in a February 2025 executive order that said his administration would “ensure that any unlawful and improper conduct, policies or practices that target Christians are identified, terminated and rectified.”

Trump also established the White House Faith Office, which replaced Biden's White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, and the Religious Liberty Commission in the first few months of his second term. In the commission's first public hearing in June, then-U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said religious liberty had “come under attack” and vowed to protect religious freedom from what she described as its “emerging threats.”

Those sentiments were reiterated in the task force’s nearly 200-page report, which criticized Biden's "Transgender Day of Visibility" proclamation (a longstanding observance which fell on Easter Sunday in 2024); charges against Christian anti-abortion activists; and alleged discrimination against Christian foster care families.