Worthwhile article but it begs the question :  If  "faith  issues"  were as 
important
as candidate BHO said they were, why did BHO as Chief Executive allow
them to be marginalized in his admin ? Sure, we can say that the WH is all  
about
politics and it is, but we did hear, didn't we, about how important faith  
issues were ?
Turns out they weren't important at all. Even when they really are  
important.
 
Billy
 
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Published on The New Republic (_http://www.tnr.com_ (http://www.tnr.com/) )

 
____________________________________

 
Things Fall Apart
How Democrats gave up on religious  voters.
    *   Tiffany Stanley  
    *   December 18, 2010 | 12:00 am 


 
 
When Barack Obama burst onto the national scene at the 2004  Democratic 
National Convention, he represented—among many things—the shining  hope for 
the religious left. Here was a liberal politician who was not afraid of  the 
language of faith, who just might reclaim territory that the Democratic  
Party had, willingly or not, ceded to Republicans. Red America did not own  
religion, Obama declared: “We worship an _awesome God_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19751-2004Jul27.html)  in the 
blue states. 
Between 2004 and 2007, when Obama announced his candidacy for  president, 
he became possibly the most prominent Democratic politician who was  
comfortable speaking about religion—a liberal who gave the impression that his  
religiosity was heartfelt, genuine, and important to his politics. He spoke 
with 
 ease about his conversion; of the influence of Reinhold Niebuhr and Martin 
 Luther King, Jr.; and, in a key speech before the Call to Renewal 
conference in  2006, of the importance of “_religion in the public square_ 
(http://www.barackobama.com/2006/06/28/call_to_renewal_keynote_address.php) .” 
In the 
2008  presidential election, Obama’s message seemed to resonate with 
religious people  who had not, in recent years, gravitated toward the 
Democratic 
Party. He won  more churchgoers than any Democratic presidential candidate 
since Bill  Clinton. 
But, in just two short years, the left has become sluggish in  its 
courtship of religious voters, significantly scaling back its faith-outreach  
programs. While many factors—primarily the economy—doomed the Democrats this  
fall, the consequences of this abdication nevertheless seem to be severe. In 
the  recent midterm elections, House Democrats lost white evangelical voters 
in  greater numbers than they did in 2004, when “values voters” flocked to 
George W.  Bush. Reversing their Democratic allegiance from the past two 
elections,  Catholics—nearly a quarter of all voters—favored the GOP 54 to 44 
percent.  Compared to 2008, the drop-offs were steep: a 20-point decline with 
Catholics, a  14-point decline with white evangelicals, and a 10-point 
decline with white  Protestants. How and why did this happen? 
The post-2004 revival of Democratic faith  outreach, which reached its apex 
in the 2008 elections, can be traced to 2005,  when House Democrats began 
holding a series of closed-door meetings. The  gatherings, known as the Faith 
Working Group, were the brainchild of Nancy  Pelosi, who wanted Democrats 
to start paying attention to religious voters. John  Kerry had just lost the 
election and had seemed markedly uncomfortable talking  about faith. (Though 
a Catholic, Kerry lost the Catholic vote to Bush, an  evangelical 
Methodist.) 
More than two dozen congressmen regularly attended the  sessions, or sent 
aides on their behalf. (Barack Obama, then a junior senator,  even sent a 
representative.) Attendees saw presentations on getting out the “God  vote”—
reaching voters motivated by their religious affiliation—and met with  
mega-church pastors as well as leaders from the religious left. The aim was  
simple: to formulate a sincere expression of progressive faith. 
This idea caught on with the Democratic National Committee  (DNC) as well. 
Though not known for his _religious literacy_ 
(http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C07E0DB1431F937A35752C0A9629C8B63)
 , DNC Chair Howard 
Dean (whom TNR _called_ 
(http://www.tnr.com/article/beyond-belief-religion-howard-dean)  “one of the 
most secular candidates to run for  president in 
modern history”) made faith outreach a priority in 2005. He  instructed DNC 
staffer and Pentecostal minister _Leah Daughtry_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/20/magazine/20minister-t.html)  to target 
religious voters, opened a  
faith-advisory council for the DNC, and kicked off the _Faith in Action_ 
(http://www.democrats.org/people/faith/about_faith_in_action)  initiative, 
which, 
according to its  mission statement, was intended to increase “the national 
visibility of  Democrats on issues of faith and public life.” The new strategy 
showed promise.  According to political consultant Eric Sapp, Democrats who 
did extended,  targeted faith outreach in 2006—like Ohio’s Ted Strickland 
and Michigan’s  Jennifer Granholm—fared 10 points better with frequent 
churchgoers than the  party’s national average. 
By 2008, faith-related political efforts had become prominent  within the 
Democratic Party, with Obama’s campaign exemplifying the trend. Obama  chose 
a young pastor, Joshua Dubois, to head the campaign’s religious outreach,  
and a hefty portion of the campaign’s field game was led by divinity school  
graduate Jeremy Bird, who adeptly merged religious outreach with political  
organizing. The campaign ran dozens of faith forums in pivotal states, and 
the  Democratic National Convention even kicked off with an interfaith 
worship  service—a first in its history. 
On Election Day, Obama made modest but definite _inroads_ 
(http://blog.faithinpubliclife.org/2008/11/exit_poll_analysis_shows_relig.html) 
 among white 
evangelicals, Protestants, and  Catholics. He did eight points better than 
Kerry with Catholic voters; and with  voters who went to church more than 
once a week, he lowered the GOP advantage  from 29 to 12 percent. Voters who 
attended church monthly actually favored Obama  over McCain, 53 to 46 percent 
(Kerry had lost these voters by two points). Once  elected, Obama expanded a 
Bush-era creation, the Office of Faith-Based and  Neighborhood Partnerships 
(OFBNP), and put Dubois at its helm, hiring a number  of the party’s faith 
consultants to work under him. Obama and the Democratic  Party seemed poised 
to command respect among the religious population they had  so diligently 
pursued. 
But, when Obama took office, the Democrats’ faith outreach  began to fall 
by the wayside. Several of those who had led the religious aspects  of the 
Obama campaign landed in the OFBNP, which is legally barred from  electoral 
politics, and thus faith-based political outreach. “I accepted this  position 
knowing it would be distinct from the electoral role,” Dubois told me.  
Another key faith operative, _Mara Vanderslice_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/26/us/politics/26faith.html) , joined Dubois in 
the OFBNP,  abandoning her 
nascent political action committee, the Matthew 25 Network, which  had been 
formed to promote progressive Christian candidates. With Dubois and  others 
quarantined in OFBNP, many of the strongest religious-outreach  coordinators 
were removed from the efforts in which they had been so  effective. 
At the same time, the national party began to strip down its  religious 
outreach programs. The DNC’s faith program had at least seven staffers  on hand 
in the 2008 race; during the recent midterms, it downsized to one, who  was 
also charged with African-American outreach—a throwback to the days when  
Democratic faith outreach meant showing up at black churches. To be sure, 
there  are significant differences between midterm and presidential elections, 
but even  taking this into consideration, several insiders say that the 
Democrats’ faith  effort noticeably dropped within the last two years. 
According 
to Mark Silk, a  professor at Trinity College who writes frequently on 
religion and politics, the  Democrats “did take [faith outreach] seriously 
enough in 2008.” But, he says,  “it didn’t happen in 2010.” 
Current DNC Chairman (and former missionary) Tim Kaine has  made vague 
statements denying that he would allow faith outreach to falter, but  evidence 
of the DNC’s clear commitment to faith-based coordination is hard to  come 
by. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) will not confirm  
the amount spent on faith-based efforts during the midterms, but it seems 
likely  that it was less than the _reported_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/23/AR2010052303747.html)
  $82,000 spent on faith 
outreach in 2008. “I  haven’t met or talked to anyone who knows of 
specific activities that are  happening out of the Democratic Party right now,” 
says Rebecca Sager, a  sociologist who studied faith outreach during the last 
two elections. In the  lead-up to the midterms, Sager embedded with the 
campaign of Virginia Democrat  Tom Perriello, who ran a strong religious 
outreach 
program in 2008, and  attempted to do the same in 2010. In 2010, however, 
the candidate received  little encouragement from the national party to 
pursue religiously motivated  voters, according to Sager. (He ultimately lost 
his 
re-election bid.) 
The experience of Democratic political consultants, Eric Sapp  and Burns 
Strider, whose consulting company, Eleison, specializes in Democratic  faith 
outreach, further testifies to the newly diminished role of faith-based  
campaigning. In 2008, Eleison was contracted to work on over 40 campaigns. This 
 
year, it was not hired by a single campaign. In August, the DNC made a  
last-minute play and brought the company on board, but, as Sapp puts it, “you  
couldn’t get a program fully underway in a couple months.” 
Of course, the Democrats’ chances at keeping  the House this election cycle 
were slim for many reasons, and they would not  necessarily have fared 
better if they had amped up their faith-based  efforts. “If anyone thinks that 
we lost because we didn’t give enough contracts  out to faith-based 
consultants, I’d like to know what they’re smoking,” says one  Democratic 
strategist. “This campaign was all about economy and jobs.” 
Yet while it’s certainly true that the 2010 campaign was  mainly about the 
economy, it’s not true that economics and faith-based outreach  are mutually 
exclusive. As one Democratic organizer told me, “I think religious  voters 
want to hear there is a moral reason we need to save this economy and not  
just an economic one.” To defend his record and contend with the right-wing  
grassroots, Obama would do well to articulate the moral-religious values 
that  permeate his policies and initially energized his supporters. And, if the 
 Democrats want to avoid the impression that such values messaging is 
merely a  presidential-election-year tactic, they should probably begin 
reinvigorating  their faith outreach efforts sooner rather than later. “Ninety 
percent of people  believe in some sort of God,” Sager points out. “It’s 
mind-boggling why you  would cede those voters to the Republican  Party.”

-- 
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