Concerned about what he saw as moral decay in America, Grant founded American Christian Cause in Southern California in 1974 to fight against pornography and homosexual rights. In 1978, he relocated to Washington, D.C., and founded Christian Voice, the first major Christian Right organization in America. Grant quickly built Christian Voice, recruiting over 107,000 dues paying members including nearly 37,000 pastors. Grant involved national conservative leaders in his movement, including Gary Jarmin,
Howard Phillips,
Terry Dolan, and
Richard Viguerie. Christian Voice-backed candidates, including
Ronald Reagan,
Steve Symms,
Dan Quayle, and
John Porter East, defeated incumbents in the
1978 and
1980 elections. Grant's group campaigned for the election of President
Ronald Reagan in the
1980 presidential election. After Phillips, Dolan, and Viguerie left several years later, they and
Jerry Falwell formed a new Christian right organization, the
Moral Majority. Similar groups subsequently founded included
Concerned Women for America,
American Coalition for Traditional Values, and the
Christian Coalition. Grant was the founding president of the American Freedom Coalition with
Ralph Abernathy. He is currently on the board of governors of the
Council for National Policy. ==Media work==