An electric star wouldn’t begin with a molecular cloud. It would begin with charge separation. Everything we see in the universe, with the possible exception of a few specks of planets and reflection nebulas, is ionized to some degree.
It’s a PLASMA, the fourth and dominant state of matter. Positive ions and negative electrons move, and because protons are a few thousand times more massive than electrons, any force–electrical, magnetic, gravitational, even mechanical–can cause some separation of charges.
An immeasurably small surplus of one electron or proton in a volume of cubic meters is what's necessary for a weak electric field to exist in deep space. That electric field drives an electric current, which generates a magnetic field that interacts with the fields of other currents.
Science critic Mel Acheson explains why it’s the Gravity Universe, not the Electric Universe, that’s impossible.
There doesn't seem to be anything here yet