Religious Right

Asra Q. Nomani 1-01-2005

A historic reform movement is taking shape in the Muslim world.

Jim Wallis 10-01-2004
God is not a Republican. Or a Democrat.
Jim Wallis 9-01-2004
The best contribution of religion is precisely not to be a loyal partisan.

In the mid-1990s, following Bill Clinton's second electoral ride to the White House, the vibrancy of Religious Right organizations appeared to be on the wane. Outside the sanctuary of the fundamentalist church, Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson had become public caricatures of intolerance and zealotry. Pundits in the media and the liberal church deemed the movement torn, shattered, and perhaps dead.

How then, less than a decade later, has the Religious Right become a powerful sector of the Republican Party, holding veto power over most any GOP maneuver?

"The Religious Right has been institutionalized within the Republican Party," confirms Kenneth Wald, a professor of political science at the University of Florida at Gainesville. "Just look at the leaders of the GOP."

Note the top seven ranking Republicans in the U.S. Senate: Bill Frist, Tennessee; Mitch McConnell, Kentucky; Rick Santorum, Pennsylvania; Bob Bennet, Utah; Kay Bailey Hutchinson, Texas; Jon Kyle, Arizona; and George Allen, Virginia. Other than party affiliation, what do these senators all have in common? Each has earned a 100 percent rating on the Christian Coalition's scorecard, voting in accordance with that organization's positions on key legislation.

A similar pattern exists among the Republican leadership in the U.S. House of Representatives. Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Texas, who in part controls whether an issue will be even debated on the House floor, also receives a 100 percent on the Christian Coalition scorecard.

S. J. Carr 11-01-1999

An inside look at the fall of the Religious Right

Jim Wallis 11-01-1999

An interview with Cal Thomas and Ed Dobson

Mark Cerbone 11-01-1995
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Michael Smith 11-01-1995
The blurring lines between Pat Robertson's money and politics.
Tom Sine 7-01-1995

How a spirit of fear can distort scripture and history.

Jim Wallis 7-01-1995

A Network for Renewal

Live From Death Row, the new book by inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal, continues to stir controversy.

Julie Polter 7-01-1995

Can the words "Christian" or "faith" appear in proximity to political issues? And if they do, what should they mean?

Gordon Aeschliman 5-01-1995
Will progressive evangelicals please stand up and be counted?
Catholic bishops evaluate welfare reform.
Tom Sine 3-01-1995

The Religious Right has hijacked American evangelicalism and made it an aberration in the global evangelical community.

Roberta Hestenes 3-01-1995
The game we must refuse to play
Jim Rice 3-01-1995

Serpents, doves, and the Religious Right

Tony Campolo 3-01-1995
The lost meaning of "evangelical."
Jim Wallis 3-01-1995
An Alternative to the Religious Right.