News & Observer | newsobserver.com | Left tries to regain religion

Published: Mar 04, 2006 12:00 AM
Modified: Mar 10, 2006 01:02 PM

Left tries to regain religion

Democrats seek to offset GOP sway

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CORRECTION

An article Saturday on Page 1B incorrectly identified the occupation of U.S. Rep. David Price's father. He was a school principal.

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When the state Republican Party asked North Carolina churches last month to give them copies of their directories, the request rested on an assumption: Although God may not be a Republican, a majority of his most faithful adherents are.

Or as the GOP memo put it, "people who regularly attend church usually vote Republican when they vote."

The memo reopened questions about whether one political party has an advantage in appealing to the faithful.

Which is one reason why several hundred people attended a forum Friday in Duke Chapel to discuss how they can recast the political debate so it is not so dominated by religious conservatives.

"It is a conversation we undertake with a new urgency," said Rep. David Price of Chapel Hill, who is co-chairman of a House Democratic caucus on religion. Price has a Yale divinity degree and is the son of a Baptist lay preacher.

"We see the religious banner being co-opted by people whose religion and politics, we think, falls short of the kind of public witness we ought to make," Price said Friday on WUNC's State of Things program.

One reason for the Democrats' urgency is that conservative evangelicals have become political shock troops for the Republican Party in the South. It is the same role that organized labor has played for northern Democrats, according to Mark Silk, an expert on religion and politics at Trinity College in Hartford, Conn.

Silk said that because evangelical conservatives tend to be more committed voters, their importance is heightened in mid-term elections such as this year's, when there is traditionally a lower turnout.

A gap emerges

The religion voting gap between Democrats and Republicans first became noticeable in 1972. But it didn't become pronounced until the 1990s, when there was a marked reaction to Bill Clinton's infidelities, Silk said. Exit polls now show that 60 percent of people who say they go to church at least once a week vote Republican.

The lines seem to be polarizing. Last year, a Haywood County Baptist church caused a national stir when it voted to expel Democrats. And shortly after President Bush was re-elected, entertainer Garrison Keillor said jokingly that he would support "a constitutional amendment to take the right to vote away from born-again Christians."

North Carolina has had a critical role in the courtship between the Republican Party and conservative Christians.

Former U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms and his political lieutenants helped create what came to be known as the religious right in the late 1970s and 1980s by attracting white Christian conservatives to his cause. Helms stressed issues that religious conservatives considered a threat to traditional values -- abortion, pornography, homosexuality and limits on school prayer.

Carter Wrenn, a veteran Helms strategist, said there was a deliberate effort to broaden the Republican Party beyond business conservatives to include cultural conservatives, many of whom had been politically uninvolved.

In more recent years, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Dole was elected in 2002 with a strong evangelical appeal, asking supporters to be her "prayer warriors."

Appealing to religion

Other Republicans, most notably U.S. Rep. Walter Jones of Farmville, have made religious appeals central to their message. Jones is a particular favorite of religious conservatives. He champions legislation that would protect the tax-exempt status of churches engaged in politics and presses the Pentagon to allow chaplains to pray in the name of Jesus Christ, rather than more generic prayers.


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Staff writer Rob Christensen can be reached at 829-4532 or robc@newsobserver.com.

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