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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (8541)4/23/2004 7:09:24 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15516
 
For God's sake

The strong influence of the Christian right on US policy
will only increase if George Bush wins a second term,
says Philip James


Friday April 23, 2004

Evangelical lobbyists used to talk about access to previous
Republican administrations. Today, they can say with
confidence: "Who needs access when we are already on the
inside?"

The influence of the Christian right on the Bush White House is
self-evident. As well as George Bush, cabinet members
Condoleezza Rice, John Ashcroft and Don Evans all consider
themselves to be born again.

This administration has embarked on a bold agenda to roll back
liberalism in the US, and won't let up if it gets a second term.

The September 11 attacks, Afghanistan and Iraq have
overshadowed Bush's conservative domestic agenda, but it
should not go overlooked by voters as we approach the
November elections.

Bush's self-description as a compassionate conservative belies
a much harsher reality. And as America's attention has been
focused on historic events overseas, the ground at home has
shifted just as dramatically.

The administration is acutely aware of the power of the Christian
voting block in the US. Gallup surveys consistently count 46%
of the population as being self-described born again Christians,
the bulk of whom live in middle America.

It is a stunning statistic, and one that escapes the attention of
the chattering classes who populate the much less devout
coastal strips.

Many of these churchgoers voted for Bush in 2000, and Carl
Rove is determined that all of them should do the same this
year. The latest data should put a spring in his step - Bush's job
approval among grassroots Christian social conservatives hovers
between 92% and 96%.

If Bush wins the election, it will mean that, after 30 years as the
law of the land, a woman's right to choose to have an abortion
will be under serious threat. The ultimate goal of the Christian
right is to overturn Roe versus Wade, the landmark 1973
decision enshrining a woman's right to choose.

In the likely event of one of the ageing supremes stepping down
in the next few years, the balance of power in the US supreme
court will be up for grabs, and Bush will not hesitate to nominate
a pro-life candidate. Having already signed a ban on late term
abortions, he believes he has the momentum on this issue.

If he wins, he has four more years in which to push a
constitutional amendment to "protect" marriage from same-sex
unions. He will not have to weigh pre-election expediency
against his belief that it is the right thing to do.

If Bush wins, it will mean four more years of Middle East policy
influenced by the evangelical belief that the Messiah will not
return until Israel rebuilds a temple on the site of the al-Aqsa
mosque in Jerusalem.

It should come as no surprise that there is not much daylight
between the beliefs of hardcore evangelicals and the Bush White
House.

When asked, during the 1999 Iowa caucus debate, who his
favourite philosopher was, Bush replied: "Jesus." At the time,
pundits thought this was a canny signal to grassroots religious
voters from a sophisticated campaigner. It was - but what people
didn't realise at the time is that Bush actually believes it as well.

The story of how he found faith at the bottom of a whisky glass
was thought to be a rote rallying yarn intended strictly for the
Republican faithful during the campaign. However, Bush has
passionately and consistently repeated the story at after-dinner
speeches throughout his time in office.

He dispelled any doubts about the strength of his Christian faith
during his last press conference on Iraq, when he made it clear
that God was personally directing him to fundamentally reshape
the Arab world.

As surely as fundamentalism has kept much of the Islamic
world in a state of cultural regression, so the fundamentalists of
the US threaten to do the same thing in the States.

John Kerry should steal a powerful line from Bush's speech on
Iraq and rephrase it thus: "Now is the time, and America is the
place, where the forces of fundamentalism are arraigned against
the forces of enlightenment."

He should make this election about a choice between two
visions: one that wants to take the country to a dark, puritanical
tyranny, as opposed to one that wants to restore the US as a
light unto nations, a place of freedom, diversity and opportunity.

And he should fire up women voters, the one voting block that
rivals the size of the born-agains and tell them: "If you want to
protect your right to choose, make sure you choose correctly in
November."

· Philip James is a former senior Democratic party strategist

guardian.co.uk