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"We are here to help people who have been the victim of an atrocious crime, whether it's police brutality or a church arson. If we don't do it, there's no one else who will."
- Cynthia M. Deitle, unit chief for the FBI's civil rights program, on why enforcing hate crime laws is a priority. (Source: Washington Post)
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It Takes a Movement: A Post-Election Analysis
[Editor's Note: Today is the first installment of a six-part series by Jim Wallis reflecting on the past two years and painting a post-election vision for people of faith and Sojourners. We encourage you to read the essay, engage in conversation with others, and support Sojourners in making this vision happen.]
Inauguration Day 2009 was highlighted for our family by a visit from Dr. Vincent Harding, the eminent African-American historian, and a member of Martin Luther King Jr.'s inner circle during the Southern freedom movement. Despite health concerns and the dangerous weather, "Uncle Vincent," as my two young boys call him, traveled across the country to witness this moment of a history in which he had been so deeply involved. As we stood on the mall clutching our inauguration tickets in our mittens, Harding said, "It was a movement that started all this."
Do you remember how cold it was in Washington for the inauguration of President Barack Obama? Yet, it was one of the warmest days in memory: in the way two million people treated each other on the Mall, in the hope that filled the air around the country, in the sense of history being made with America's first black president, in the expectation that the country was about to move to a new place of change out of the grip of a deep recession, and the promise of a generational political shift. How ironically warm it seemed on that distant January day now stands in sharp contrast with the cold and very angry political atmosphere that was evidenced in the midterm elections.
In politics there is always a spiritual choice to be made -- to choose hope or fear. Leaders can build movements by appealing to a vision of what our country can be or by painting a picture of whom to blame and what to be afraid of. Obama won in November of 2008, in the midst of a recession, bank failures, and two wars, by capturing the political narrative which spoke to our values as a country and by riding a movement that had reason to hope and was ready to work for change. But the new president lost the narrative, and the "movement" is now on the other side of the political aisle. A strong values narrative attracted many in 2008, including many religious voters who had long eluded the Democrats. But now, many seem to have lost faith.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, President Barack Obama, a Democrat, reached farther out to the faith community than many Republicans have, including his predecessor George W. Bush -- both in his campaign and the first two years of his administration. While voters have often viewed Republicans as the party most friendly to religion, polling by Public Religion Research Institute showed that most viewed Obama and McCain as equally friendly to faith in that election. Indeed, highly energized and predominantly religious black voters overcame their cynicism to believe that another America might be possible, faith-inspired Hispanic voters dramatically shifted their allegiances, Evangelical and Catholic voters decided to break with their recent past (or their parents) because of what they heard from Obama. They were all drawn to a political leader who seemed to want to move past old political divisions and boundaries, and was not afraid to identify the moral issues at stake in politics.
But if you compare 2010 exit polls to 2006, Democrats performed 14 points worse with white Protestants, 14 points worse with white Evangelicals, and 20 points worse with Catholics. Compared to 2008, Democrats did 10 points worse with white Protestants, 14 points worse with white Evangelicals, and 20 points worse with Catholics. That is quite a swing vote.
Given many obstacles, administration advocates believe that Obama has a two-year record of great accomplishments, including some things that his predecessors failed to do. He thinks so too, and points to historic health care legislation, the most serious financial regulatory reform since the Great Depression, no energy bill but increased fuel standards, new student loan programs, unnoticed investments in infrastructure and clean energy, a much expanded national service agenda, and a plan for educational reform which we haven't seen in 30 years. Obama wonders why people don't see all that, which he calls "the most successful administration in generations in moving the progressive agenda forward." But Obama's legislative victories inside the beltway have clearly not connected to the everyday lives of too many Americans or to their core values. Many families who are struggling and afraid don't believe that Washington or Wall Street cares about them or is really with them. And they showed their anger at the polls, or their disillusionment by not even showing up.
Four years ago, and two years ago, people voted decisively for change; and now, in a shift no one could have predicted after the last election, voters have just voted for change again in 2010. And chilling polls show that the vast majority of the country, this time, voted against rather than for particular candidates or policies. The Republican leadership made it clear they were running a campaign that was meant as a referendum on Obama's first two years in office. The change promised in 2008 never came about in the minds of many across the political spectrum -- on the left, the right, and the center. The new president has been up against almost insurmountable odds, especially from all that he inherited, or as he puts it, the "cards we were dealt." But, from the results we just saw and the Republican priority of making Obama a one-term President, it clearly seems that many in the country would seem to disagree with the White House assessment. What happened?
[Part 2 of this series, "Why Politics is Frozen Solid," will be available on the God's Politics blog tomorrow. Sojourners is building a movement to inspire hope, over fear. That's the message that must echo in 2010. Help us make it happen.]
Time for a New START: No More Nukes!
This past April, President Barack Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev signed the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START). This treaty constitutes an agreement between both governments committing to reducing their long-range nuclear weapons arsenals by about one-third. New START is a significant step towards a world without nuclear weapons.
You can help make a difference by supporting the passage of New START.
+Ask your senator to support passage of the New START -- the right step toward nuclear non-proliferation and a world that honors the dignity and human rights of all people.
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Inside Sojourners Magazine |
The Christian Literary Underground
"Writers who want to let both their faith and their creativity run free are finding a new home in the Christian literary underground .... It's good news for everyone who eschews both cookie-cutter writing and cookie-cutter faith."
+Read more from Julie Polter's article, "The Borderlands of Publishing," in this month's Sojourners magazine.
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ON THE GOD'S POLITICS BLOG |
+ See what's new on the blog of Jim Wallis and friends
Is Women's Leadership in the Church a Primary Issue? by Mimi Haddad If you are concerned about the question of gender and Christian faith you have probably heard someone say, "Yes, the woman's question is important, but it is not a 'primary issue.'" + Click to continue
Not Happy with the Results? Hallelujah, Anyhow by Valerie Elverton Dixon I am not happy with the results of the 2010 elections. I think the elections turned on misinformation, anger, and fear. + Click to continue
Political Games in Dead-Serious Times by Debra Dean Murphy Because Americans allow bickering politicians and ratings-driven news executives to tell us what constitutes "politics," we have a tragically short-sighted view of what it means to be citizens with a shared destiny who seek the common good and the flourishing of all. + Click to continue
After This Election, We Need a New Vision Forward by Jim Wallis This election, some good people were elected and other good people lost. Some of these officials, newly elected and re-elected, will try to find solutions to some of the great challenges facing our country today. + Click to continue
Do We Need Truth and Civility Past Election Day? Yes We Do. by Elizabeth Denlinger Reaves Well, we made it to Election Day -- time to pack up the ol' Truth and Civility campaign until the next election … right? + Click to continue
Stopping the Next Food Crisis by Elizabeth Palmberg Imagine a world in which Wall Street decided that vaccines were a good investment -- not pharmaceutical companies, but doses of medicine themselves. + Click to continue
Domestic Surveillance: FBI Spies on Catholic Workers by Michael Komba Since I moved into Casa Maria Catholic Worker in 1999, my work has focused around hospitality for the homeless. + Click to continue
Feed Her a Line: Bridging the Gender Digital Divide by Carol Stewart On a short trip to Jordan in 2001, I remember my amazement when tent-dwelling Bedouins taught me about text messaging. + Click to continue
Honor Roll: Senator Andrew Maynard and Republican Challenger Stuart Norman by Duane Shank A local Connecticut race for the state Senate seat has shown two candidates from opposing parties running a unique campaign of civility. + Click to continue
Moral Agency and Selective Conscientious Objection by Logan Mehl-Laituri Moral agency, simply stated, describes the ability one has to freely choose in accord with their morals. A moral agent is free, and freedom is the basis for all moral reasoning. + Click to continue
Things Worth Remembering from the Rally to Restore Sanity by Sheldon C. Good On my way back to Pennsylvania after attending Jon Stewart's Rally to Restore Sanity in Washington, D.C. last Saturday, I couldn't get one sign out of my head which read, "It's too bad we even need a rally to restore SANITY." + Click to continue
Jon Stewart's Misguided Rally to Restore Sanity by Eric Stoner While I regularly watch The Daily Show and think its political satire is second to none, the Rally to Restore Sanity that was held on the Mall in Washington, D.C. was problematic on many levels. + Click to continue
Friday Links Round Up: Van Gogh. SF Giants. All Saints' Day by Jeannie Choi Van Gogh. SF Giants. All Saints' Day. Here's a little round up of links from around the web you may have missed this week. + Click to continue
Stanley Hauerwas on Glenn Beck and More by Jarrod McKenna What do Cornel West, Rita Nakashima Brock, Carol Rose, and Onleilove Alston have in common? They are all our recent guests on Iconocast,a podcast "exploring the anti-imperial implications of Jesus' teachings within our modern imperial context." + Click to continue
A Hymn for Economic Justice: 'Zacchaeus was a Tax Man' by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette Many people grew up enjoying the song, "Zacchaeus was a wee little man," celebrating this beloved story of Jesus and a tax collector. + Click to continue
Churches and Elections: Do's and Don'ts by Duane Shank In the last few weeks, as seems to happen every election year, both parties along with some pastors and churches are stretching (or breaking) the legal limits on partisan electioneering. + Click to continue
Campaign Ads: Scarier Than Halloween Decorations? by Evan Trowbridge Around this time of year, I sometimes find myself wondering, "Is that a Halloween decoration or campaign paraphernalia?" + Click to continue
Honor Roll: Trinity United Methodist Church by Patricia Kilby When a radical, small Christian church threatened to burn copies of the Quaran on September 11, here in Gainesville, Florida, the international media descended upon our city. + Click to continue
Xenophobia 101 by Andrew Wainer These can be frustrating times for immigration reform advocates. In spite of President Obama's pledges and a streak of national interest early this year due to Arizona's restrictive immigration law, momentum for policy change has waned. + Click to continue
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Top Stories:
Some say Democrats' weakened faith outreach partly to blame for losses
CNN.com Belief blog
Others in the progressive faith worlds, meanwhile, say Democrats - including President Barack Obama - have shied away from the faith-based messaging that they honed in the years after the 2004 election, which was seen to be determined by so-called values voters. +Click to continue
Exit poll: God vote followed faithful pattern
USA Today Blog
Conservative Christian Jordon Sekulow can crow over election victories and progressive left Rev. Jim Wallis can lament the missing-in-action values like compassion for the poor in the vote. But now come the statistics and -- surprise -- the 2010 election was pretty much like 2008 and elections before it in the way people of faith voted. +Click to continue
Have Democrats Lost Faith In Faith-Based Outreach?
Religion News Service
But the Rev. Jim Wallis, a progressive evangelical who is close to Democratic leaders, said Tuesday’s election pointed to the party’s lack of vision, not networks. +Click to continue
Consultants, columnists cite faith factor in Republican sweep
Associated Baptist Press
Voting Against
The Huffington Post
Is There a Politics of God?
Relevant Magazine
"Sojourners in the news" articles are the most recent news clippings that mention Sojourners in any way - whether favorably or unfavorably. Though we provide the text on our site for your convenience, we do not necessarily endorse the views of these articles or their source publications.
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