While it is clear enough that Evangelicals were between a rock and a hard  
place,
at least from 1992 on, this was not exactly the case in the 80s. Maybe you  
could say
that there also was a dilemma in the Carter years, but what irked me at the 
 time
--the Reagan years , about Bush #1 he was essentially  hopeless--   was how 
little
that social conservatives got for the millions of votes they gave to the  
GOP.
 
What they got was lip service and just about nothing else. RR was  
pro-homosexual
( or no better than not eager to push the homosexual  agenda ).  He was 
essentially
disinterested in the abortion debate, and so forth. He was what he was, a  
creature
of Hollywood, a pal of Rock Hudson, et al.,  and had close to zero  
interest in
Christian values per se.  
 
What he did was to jawbone for the Rapture and other metaphysical  themes,
none of which had practical policy consequences, but sounded good to the  
ears
of believers.  What believers actually got was......  very  little, close 
to zero.
 
Ralph Reed was one of those creepy types who negatively impressed me
from the first time I saw/heard him on television. Can't remember  exactly
what he said but I recall getting sick to my stomach. This man, I said to 
myself, is an opportunist, smart, yes, but also disinterested in any (  any 
)
values issues except abortion.  Then he abandoned the Christian  Coalition
when times got a little rough, saying something to the effect that the CC  
wasn't
going to get most of what they were after anyway ( no thanks to his
lukewarm "help" ), and it was time for him to move on, into the
establishment of the party.
 
Robertson, a poor judge of character again and again, had picked a slime  
ball
just like he ( Pat )  was the number 1 champion of Taylor, the prez of  
Liberia, 
a professed "Christian" who murdered thousands of Liberians. 
 
So, there is all of that.
 
What maybe made me most dubious about the whole schmeer, was a church
I attended for a while in Longview, Washington.  I still recall  that 
mostly it
was one helluva terrific church. Nazarene or something similar.  But  one
Sunday the spell was broken in a big way. The young pastor said, from the  
pulpit,
"its no secret that were are almost all Republicans here," as if no-one  
else
counted. I had no feelings for the Democrats but I was an  Independent
and if the Dems may get up to 55% - 60% of my ire, that leaves a hefty 45 % 
 or so
that I seriously don't like about the GOP.
 
I was supposed to go along with the pastor's "vote Republican" message  ?
What was the Gospel he was preaching ?  It wasn't in my Bible.
 
In short, while all of this is anecdotal, there are a good number of things 
 about
the Republican Party that are major disappointments. NOT because  these
things make me want to vote Democratic, the opposite is the case.  Leaving 
aside
the fact that now and then there are Democrats who I would vote  for,
this is all about how the GOP offers me just about nothing.
 
Hence my interest in 3rd parties, at least now and then. 
 
But the biggest joke, as I see it, is how  --at least until the Tea  Party--
conservative Republican voters have been patsies for the GOP  establishment
and if they get screwed by the party's big shots, well, they are
happy to roll over and play dead.
 
Not one GOP presidential candidate or president in my memory has given 2  
cents
for values issues. Not one. Same for most of the leadership, people like  
Kemp.
and Dole before they were on the 1996 ticket.
 
When someone comes along who IS concerned, like Buchanan,  --leaving  aside
his various problems--  they go to lengths to ruin him.
 
Republican Nominees for the Court, none that I know of have given a  damn 
for values issues, either.
 
This leaves me essentially stranded.
 
Billy
 
 
============================================
 
 
 
 
 
5/5/2012 8:55:34 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

Hmmm.  I haven't paid attention to Ralph Reed  since, oh, the early 1980s. 
He's had a couple of decent books, and then "poof"  off of the radar screen. 

This here really tied my hat into a  knot:

To a large  extent, this partisanship coincided with increased levels of 
hostility from  the other side of the aisle. Yet even if many in the 
Democratic Party were  pushing evangelicals out, evangelical leaders didn’t 
have to 
respond by  becoming uncritical cheerleaders of the Republicans.  Moreover, 
the causation ran the other way, as well; uncritical evangelical  
cheerleading for the GOP generated hostility to evangelicals among  
Democrats—certainly 
after 1980, if not before.

So we have  Democrats pushing evangelicals out, but they shouldn't become 
"uncritical  cheerleaders of the Republicans." Let's see, I wasn't overjoyed 
with Ford,  Bush I, Dole, McCain, and now Mittens, but I guess that's not 
being critical  enough. And yet this cheerleading brought about more pushing 
out. Which is the  chicken and which the egg? And which one is first? Like it 
or not, the pushing  out of evangelicals basically pushed the South out of 
the Democratic party, at  least on the national level. On the local level, a 
lot of Texas and Louisiana  counties (parishes) still have Democrats in 
local office. However, no one  would mistake any of them for Nancy Pelosi. 

There's also  this:

4)  Partisanship. Perhaps most important was the new willingness of  
evangelical leaders—unconsciously, but consistently—to put all their eggs in  
the 
basket of one political party. Earlier evangelical leaders had  always seen 
themselves as the guardians of a bipartisan social order and  cultural 
consensus, so they had carefully maintained relationships across  party lines. 
[ 
emphasis added ] Billy Graham, turned off by  Goldwater’s opposition to 
federal civil rights legislation, welcomed Johnson’s  aggressive efforts to 
cultivate his support. Pat Robertson backed the  evangelical Carter over Ford 
in 1976. But under the Religious Right model,  seemingly without realizing 
what they were doing, evangelical leaders  extensively subordinated the life 
of the church to the political interests of  the GOP.

I was rather unaware of Graham's dislike of Goldwater  for any reason, much 
less on civil rights, but I was only in second grade at  the time (1964), 
so give me a break. The "Landslide Lyndon" basically stolen  election of 1948 
is legendary down here, so there is no real love of Lyndon,  except maybe 
in the halls of texas university. I don't remember the Robertson  endorsement 
of Carter, but I also was not yet a Baptist (not that it would  make any 
difference, but at least Carter is being demoted to the second worst  
President in US History). 

For many years Evangelicals have responded  to the pro-life dog whistle. 
Sadly, without any results. But they also realize  that they are not going to 
get any results from the Democrats either, the  almost explicit party of 
abortion. So you might be able to find enough p-o'ed  evangelicals for a third 
party. Sadly that would put the Democrats in charge,  and with the way the 
current one is operating, I fear for the continued  existence of this 
country. 

I totally agree with this:

Then in 2000, George W. Bush  broke with the Religious Right strategy 
decisively. He aligned with  conservatives on social issues and wasn’t shy 
about 
identifying himself  personally as a man of faith, but he eschewed 
triumphalist rhetoric and kept  Religious Right leaders at arm’s length. He 
emphasized that he was equally  sympathetic not only to “people of all faiths,” 
but 
also to “people of no  faith” and their concerns. His heavy investment in 
positive portrayals of  Islam after 9/11 was of a piece with this. Bush’s 
desire to treat  Christianity, Islam, and atheism as functionally equivalent 
for civic purposes  stands in stark contrast to the “Judeo-Christian” moral 
traditionalism of the  Religious Right. Bush consistently appealed to what he 
said were  universal values shared by all humanity; whatever you think of 
that, it isn’t  what Pat Robertson believes.  

This trend has only  accelerated under Obama, to such a point that 
individual evangelicals, without  prompting from the pulpit, are becoming even 
further alienated from the  Democratic Party. 

David 

  _   
 
"Free  speech is meant to protect unpopular speech. Popular speech, by 
definition,  needs no protection."—Neal  Boortz 



On 5/5/2012 11:32 AM,  [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
Emphases in BF in text
------------------------------
 
 
 
Public Discourse
 
 
Evangelicals and Politics: The  Religious Right 
(Born 1979, Died  2000)
 
by _Greg Forster_ (http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/author/gforster)   
May 2, 2012
 
The largely forgotten history of evangelical  political activism forces us 
to re-evaluate the rights and wrongs of the  Religious Right movement. The 
second in a three-part series. 
 
The Religious Right movement is a misunderstood phenomenon. It has been  
dead for more than a decade, and few are now comfortable defending it. But  
most evangelical leaders haven’t yet come to terms with the most important  
reasons it failed. That’s why we haven’t discovered a satisfactory model of  
political engagement for the twenty-first century. 
The rise of the Religious Right was not as dramatic a change from _previous 
history_ (http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2012/05/5213)  as it may seem. 
Evangelicals did  change the strategy of their political activism in the 
late 1970s. The new  strategy was markedly better in some respects, and 
markedly worse in others.  Both the good and the bad changes received much 
attention and convinced  people that something fundamentally new was happening. 
Though evangelicals’ strategy changed, their underlying assumptions about  
politics and the goals of their activism remained largely the same. These  
continuities deserve more notice than they have received, especially if we  
want to think systematically about how our activism needs to change for the  
new century. 
Unfortunately, some commentators use the phrase “religious right” simply  
to refer to voters who are both politically conservative and religiously  
conservative. On this definition, there will always be a “religious  right”—
but that’s a very misleading picture. Most evangelicals vote  conservative, 
yet less than a fifth continue to identify themselves as  members of the 
Religious Right. 
It’s more illuminating to consider the Religious Right as a distinct  
political strategy. Evangelicals’ operating strategy incorporated at least  
four 
major changes in the late 1970s, all of which culminated in 1979  through a 
broad constellation of political efforts (such as Jerry Falwell’s  founding 
of the Moral Majority): 
1) Catholics. Well into the early 1970s, most  evangelical leaders were 
almost as anti-Catholic as they were  anti-secularist. This was a natural 
result of their political model based on  restoring the old 
Protestant-dominated 
social order. But by 1979,  evangelical leaders were suddenly making major 
long-term investments in  alliances with Catholics. They jettisoned the 
confessional Protestantism of  the old social order for a broader 
“Judeo-Christian
” moral  traditionalism. 
2) Fundamentalism. What had been an acrimonious divide  between “
fundamentalists” and “evangelicals” was also largely mitigated. Up  through the 
early 
1970s, the prevailing political model had fueled hostility  between these 
subgroups. The evangelical desire to act as moral guardians of  America’s 
social order clashed head-on with fundamentalist fears that  playing such a 
role would inevitably compromise doctrinal purity, just as it  had for the 
mainline. Tensions along these lines remain to this day, but in  1979 they 
suddenly became subordinated to what were viewed as more urgent  moral and 
cultural concerns. This opened the door to unprecedented levels of  evangelical 
cooperation and of political mobilization among  fundamentalists. 
3) Race. White evangelical leaders as a group, who had  too often turned a 
blind eye to racial injustice or even aided and abetted  it, got on board 
for civil rights. Until the 1970s, many white evangelical  leaders supported 
the racial status quo uncritically, in large part because  they saw 
themselves as guardians of the existing social order. Changed  racial attitudes 
would 
still take a while to reach everybody, but by 1979 it  was clear enough 
which way the wind was blowing. 
4) Partisanship. Perhaps most important was the new  willingness of 
evangelical leaders—unconsciously, but consistently—to put  all their eggs in 
the 
basket of one political party. Earlier  evangelical leaders had always seen 
themselves as the guardians of a  bipartisan social order and cultural 
consensus, so they had carefully  maintained relationships across party lines. 
[ 
emphasis added ]  Billy Graham, turned off by Goldwater’s opposition to 
federal civil rights  legislation, welcomed Johnson’s aggressive efforts to 
cultivate his support.  Pat Robertson backed the evangelical Carter over Ford 
in 
1976. But under the  Religious Right model, seemingly without realizing 
what they were doing,  evangelical leaders extensively subordinated the life of 
the church to the  political interests of the GOP. 
Evangelical leaders muted their criticism of immoral personal behavior in  
order to avoid embarrassing Republican leaders. Moral witness on divorce was 
 especially eclipsed. Graham had backed Eisenhower in part because his  
opponent, Adlai Stevenson, was a divorcee; evangelicals mobilized against  Nelso
n Rockefeller for the same reason. All that changed when evangelicals  
decided to go all-in with the divorced Reagan. Right at the moment when  
divorce 
was becoming normalized, evangelicals unilaterally disarmed  themselves 
against it. 
They also tempered the more socially scandalous aspects of their  theology, 
such as the exclusivity of salvation in Christ. The Religious  Roundtable’s 
1980 National Affairs Briefing is mainly remembered for  Reagan’s “I 
endorse you” remark, but a remark by Southern Baptist Convention  President 
Bailey Smith is equally noteworthy. Smith complained that  political rallies 
typically feature public prayers from both Christian and  Jewish clergy, which 
implies Christianity and Judaism are the same, when in  fact only those who 
trust Christ have God’s favor. Robertson and Falwell  rushed to offer 
complex, obfuscatory “clarifications” of this embarrassing  comment, lest the 
media fallout damage Reagan. 
And they donated time and resources to GOP politicians who ignored them,  
in pathetic hopes of currying their favor. Ralph Reed was especially  
aggressive in pushing evangelicals to invest in helping the GOP, on the  
preposterous theory that the GOP would feel a need to repay them.[ !  ]  A 
federal 
corruption investigation would later expose Reed  as a shameless huckster on 
the make (“Hey, now that I’m done with the  electoral politics, I need to 
start humping in corporate accounts!” ran a  now _notorious_ 
(http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aG6gHO3vwYZQ)  1998 
_email_ 
(http://web.archive.org/web/20070829172849/http:/indian.senate.gov/exhibitspart1.pdf)
  
to Jack Abramoff). But it says a  lot about evangelical leaders’ naiveté 
that Reed could play them so  brazenly. It says even more that _some people 
are still  letting him do it_ (http://ffcoalition.com/) . 
To a large extent, this partisanship coincided with increased levels of  
hostility from the other side of the aisle. Yet even if many in the  
Democratic Party were pushing evangelicals out, evangelical leaders didn’t  
have to 
respond by becoming uncritical cheerleaders of the  Republicans. Moreover, 
the causation ran the other way, as well;  uncritical evangelical cheerleading 
for the GOP generated hostility to  evangelicals among Democrats—certainly 
after 1980, if not before. 
What explains these four strategic shifts? The conventional narrative is  
that court decisions on issues such as abortion and school prayer were the  
catalyst. But evangelicals were actually slow to adopt these causes, largely  
due to their anti-Catholicism. 
Some Religious Right leaders point to a 1978 IRS proposal to strip some  
evangelical schools of their tax-exempt status. But that seems like a  slender 
thread on which to hang such a huge and sustained social shift. The  
proposal, which was never implemented, was not a central feature in  
evangelical 
political discourse. Nor was this the first time evangelicals  had ever been 
the target of federal harassment. 
A parsimonious explanation that fits the facts is that the astonishing  
steamroller of libertinism in the 1970s produced something like a panic.  
Evangelicals saw America rushing ever more rapidly toward cultural  
catastrophe. 
The tipping point had to be near. “God is angry with us as a  nation,” 
Falwell declared. “I have a divine mandate to go right into the  halls of 
Congress and fight for laws that will save America.” 
The moral panic theory explains at least three of the  four strategic 
shifts. Evangelicals dropped their opposition to Catholics  because, in their 
panic, they were desperate for allies. Fundamentalists  overcame their fear of 
activism because they were more afraid of societal  collapse. Evangelicals 
went all-in on the GOP in hopes of maximizing their  political leverage. (The 
change in racial attitudes is a more complex story  to which we can’t do 
justice here.) 
This theory differs from the prevailing explanations mainly by denying  
that evangelical mobilization was primarily a defensive response to  
anti-evangelical government action. There certainly have been plenty of  
instances of 
legal, policy, and regulatory discrimination against  evangelicals—and not 
only recently. In the 1940s, for example, FCC  regulations blatantly 
discriminated against evangelical religious  broadcasters in favor of the 
mainline 
until evangelical political activists  successfully challenged this 
injustice. But in general, evangelicals have  been much too quick to cry out, 
“They 
attacked us! We’re only defending  ourselves!” The high points and low 
points of evangelical mobilization in  the twentieth century just don’t seem 
very 
strongly connected, either  in timing or in content, to government 
incursions. But they are clearly  connected to heightened anxiety about 
national 
moral decay. 
Why does all this matter? Because it shows that what was really shifting  
in evangelical politics was strategy—evangelicals were prompted to desperate  
measures by what they saw as desperate times, but their basic assumptions  
and goals did not really change. 
In some ways, the Religious Right exacerbated the inadequacies of the  
inherited model by removing inefficiencies and mobilizing more effectively.  It 
was a triumphalist movement, openly bragging that with its new alliances,  
new voter enrollments, and new partisan strategic positioning, it would roll  
to victory, put the enemies of morality under its heels, and save America.  
“We have . . . enough votes to run the country,” Robertson announced in  
1979. “We are going to take over.” As with Ockenga in 1947, Robertson’s  
triumphalism was not only typical for the time, it was formative. 
The Religious Right accomplished early successes. Before the 1980  
election, libertinism was winning an accelerating series of political  
victories, 
shifting American law and policy onto a materialistic,  utilitarian basis. 
After 1980, a new anti-libertine coalition forged by the  Religious Right 
brought this victory procession to a halt. That is a  substantial achievement. 
But the Religious Right was already declining in power by the mid-1980s,  
and it withered throughout the 1990s. After the early years, it accomplished  
few of its legislative priorities. Politicians deftly extracted  money, 
votes, and volunteer time from evangelicals while delivering little  of 
substance. [ and they did just about nothing about it, taking  solace in a cult 
of 
personality centered on Reagan   -BR comment ]  The best it could do was 
maintain a political stalemate with  libertinism. 
Here is where I have to disagree with Daniel Williams’ groundbreaking new  
book, _God’s Own Party_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Gods-Own-Party-Making-Christian/dp/0195340841) . 
Williams has collected  extensive evidence documenting 
evangelical activism throughout the last  century, upon which I’ve drawn in 
both parts of this article (along with  other sources). But Williams thinks 
the Religious Right was highly  successful; his main thesis is that 
evangelicals are now essentially in  control of the GOP. I agree with _David 
Courtwright_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/No-Right-Turn-Conservative-Politics/dp/0674046773)  that 
it’s the politicians who  have been in the driver’s seat. 
Then in 2000, George W. Bush broke with the Religious Right strategy  
decisively. He aligned with conservatives on social issues and wasn’t shy  
about 
identifying himself personally as a man of faith, but he eschewed  
triumphalist rhetoric and kept Religious Right leaders at arm’s length. He  
emphasized that he was equally sympathetic not only to “people of all  faiths,” 
but 
also to “people of no faith” and their concerns. His heavy  investment in 
positive portrayals of Islam after 9/11 was of a piece with  this. Bush’s 
desire to treat Christianity, Islam, and atheism as  functionally equivalent 
for civic purposes stands in stark contrast to the  “Judeo-Christian” moral 
traditionalism of the Religious Right. Bush  consistently appealed to what he 
said were universal values shared by all  humanity; whatever you think of 
that, it isn’t what Pat Robertson  believes. 
Bush’s campaign and presidency were not just the death knell of the  
Religious Right strategy; they were the beginning of the end of the whole  
twentieth-century evangelical model of political engagement. Bush manifestly  
did 
not view either evangelicals as such or some grand coalition of  conservative 
religious traditions as having a special guardianship over  America’s 
social order. Nor did he have any interest in trying to restore  such a 
guardianship. 
A decade after its death, it now seems to be pretty widely admitted that  
the Religious Right strategy was a bad deal. It did extensive damage within  
our own household and exposed us to a great deal of political manipulation.  
Worst of all, it has reinforced a widespread cultural perception that the  
gospel of Christ is a right-wing political program, _driving people away 
from the church_ 
(http://blogs.the-american-interest.com/berger/2012/03/21/the-religiously-unaffiliated-in-america/)
 . 
If the twentieth-century model is no longer satisfactory, how do we begin  
building a new one? I’ll look at that in a follow-up article  tomorrow.





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