Guys. You need to remember that evolution is observable and has, in fact, been observed. Not just for micro organisms (though they're the usual targets since they reproduce so damn quickly it's easier to see), but also larger animals like insects (the peppered moth experiment comes to mind, and no it wasn't refuted)... and, occasionally, humans. I seem to recall one paper about the skin colour of (I think) Japanese people living in Japan becoming lighter over the course of something like 200 years, believed to be linked to sexual selection. I couldn't tell you how robust the paper was (I saw it something like a decade ago), but yeah. It's like seeing a guy shoot another and say he couldn't possibly be responsible and the crime was in fact caused by wizard magic, or that we could never know it wasn't in fact caused by wizard magic.
You can have stupid-ass worldviews all you want, but science has no place for wizard magic. It's probably also best to not do something like put a guy who doesn't give a shit about scientific evidence and all that good stuff on a science committee, sort of like it wouldn't be a good idea to put a guy on a medical board if he's someone who doesn't believe micro organisms can cause disease. I'm also curious about where he saw all this "evidence" for a young earth as a "scientist" when he was a GP. Do medical doctors do a lot of research in earth sciences?
No comment on the "don't vote Republican" thing over this, but it is important to note that this guy is not a radical within that party for disregarding 140+ years of scientific data and refinement.