In 1922, Evans joined a group of Klan activists, including Tyler, Clarke, and
D. C. Stephenson, in a "coup" against
William Joseph Simmons, the group's leader. They deceived Simmons into agreeing to a reorganization of the Klan that removed his practical control; Simmons said that they had claimed that if he remained the Imperial Wizard of the Klan, discord would hamper the organization. Evans gained power and was formally ensconced as Imperial Wizard of the Klan at a 1923 "Klonvokation" in Atlanta, Georgia. Although a legal battle between Evans and Simmons ensued, during which time Simmons was the Klan's titular "emperor," Evans retained control of the Klan. He initially said that he had been unaware of a pending coup until after he was selected. However, by the end of their feud, he described Simmons as the "leader of
Bolshevik Klansmen betraying the movement" and later expelled the former leader. , at which Evans would speak As the leader of the Klan, Evans advanced a form of
nativist,
white supremacy that cast
Protestantism as a fundamental part of
American patriotism. To Evans, whiteness and Protestantism were equally valued and sometimes conflated: he said the Klan supported the "uncontaminated growth of Anglo-Saxon civilization". He maintained the belief that white Protestants had the exclusive right to govern the US because they were the descendants of the early colonists, whom he described as fleeing Europe for the US to escape its societal bounds. He admitted that many Klan members were of rural, uneducated backgrounds but argued that power should be given to "the common people of America." In a pamphlet entitled
Ideals of the Ku Klux Klan, Evans described the Klan as follows: • This is a white man's organization. • This is a gentile organization. • It is an American organization. • It is a Protestant organization. Under Evans, the Klan supported a mixture of
right-wing and
left-wing political positions, which were described by Thomas Pegram of
Loyola University Maryland as "too much of a patchwork to be considered an ideological system." Klan literature spoke highly of politicians such as
Woodrow Wilson,
William Jennings Bryan, and
Grover Cleveland. Evans borrowed numerous concepts from the writings of
Lothrop Stoddard and
Madison Grant, American writers of the period who promoted
eugenics and
scientific racism, and he attempted to cast his platforms as if they were based on science. Evans attacked immigrants by arguing that they would promote ideologies such as
anarchism and
communism, were threats to national unity, and were involved with
bootlegging during
Prohibition. He considered immigrants "ignorant, superstitious, religious devotees" intent on earning money in the US before retiring to their homelands. However, he supported immigration of whom he deemed "Nordic." Evans also argued against
miscegenation, and Catholic and Jewish immigration on the grounds that they were threats to genetic "good stock," a racial division that was widely supported among white Americans. Evans believed the
Catholic Church sought to take control of the US government; he also questioned American Catholics' loyalty to their country, writing that they were subject to their priests, and, as such, to the entire
Roman Catholic hierarchy and the
Pope. In other writings, he expressed fears that the Catholic Church, in alliance with Jews and non-white Protestant groups, was becoming increasingly active in politics and thus blurring the
separation of church and state. Under Evans's leadership, the Klan became active in
Indiana and
Illinois, rather than focusing on the Southeast, as it had done in the past. It also grew in
Michigan, where 40,000 members, more than half its total, lived in
Detroit. It became characterized as an organization prominent in urban areas of the Midwest, where it attracted native-born Americans competing for industrial jobs with recent immigrants. It also attracted members in Nebraska, Colorado, Oregon and Washington. Evans appointed Stephenson, his early collaborator, as kleagle and Grand Dragon of Indiana. The relationship between the two leaders quickly became acrimonious; Stephenson clashed with Evans over the distribution of membership fees and became embittered after Evans refused to help fund the purchase of a school in Indiana. Although Stephenson believed Evans had deliberately thwarted his attempt to purchase the school to limit his power, Evans unexpectedly promoted Stephenson to
Grand Dragon of the "northern realm" in July 1923. Historian Leonard Joseph Moore of
McGill University contends that Evans paid particular attention to the
Indiana Klan out of financial self-interest since it was the largest state branch. The political scientist Arnold S. Rice writes that Evans also worked on a series of changes, advertised as reforms, to the Klan structure and sought to promote a positive public opinion of the Klan; Evans felt that his organization should be able to reach out to those who were "struggling with the moral decay and economic distress of the 20th century." He increased the Klan's surveillance of members before and after initiation, expelling those considered to be of "questionable morals." He also worked to increase Klan involvement in local policing and denounced acts of violence committed by Klan members, promoting the Klan as a symbol of lawfulness. Those efforts, although successful in reducing the number of attacks, were ultimately unable to sway public opinion in the Klan's favor. ==Internal conflicts==