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[IP] more on Bush Campaign Wants Church Lists





Begin forwarded message:

From: Dana Blankenhorn <danablankenhorn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: July 5, 2004 3:40:39 PM EDT
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [IP] more on Bush Campaign Wants Church Lists
Reply-To: Dana Blankenhorn <dana@xxxxxxxxxx>

Dave:

There is a huge difference between the process Jonathan describes in
Philadelphia and what is happening with the Bush campaign, which is why even leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention like Richard Land have objected
to it.

And it's very, very important that we understand this difference.

In Philadelphia the movement is led by the churches. The pastors contact the party. The pastors control their membership list. The pastors control the process. Churches are free to participate in politics in this way, and many
conservative churches have done just this over the years.

In this case, however, it is the campaign that is seeking the church lists,
not necessarily from pastors, but from church members.

Let's look at the lede to that Reuters story again:

"President Bush, seeking to mobilize religious
conservatives for his reelection campaign, has asked church-going
volunteers to turn over church membership directories, campaign officials
said on Thursday."

See the difference? This is being directed by the campaign, targetting
supporters with access to lists which belong to their pastors. The campaign is telling these people to, in essence, steal these lists on the campaign's
behalf.

This is a big, bright red line. This is a very big deal. It is one thing for
churches to be involved in politics. It is another thing entirely for
politicians to be directing churches, or (worse) to tell church members they
should take church property and turn it over to politicians.

But that's what happens when churches seek secular power, secular authority,
and the money that comes with it. Power corrupts.


Dana Blankenhorn   danablankenhorn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
The Blankenhorn Effect  http://www.trafford.com/robots/02-1082.html
Moores Lore Blog   http://www.corante.com/mooreslore
A-Clue.Com Newsletter  http://www.a-clue.com

----- Original Message -----
From: "David Farber" <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Ip" <ip@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, July 03, 2004 6:11 PM
Subject: [IP] more on Bush Campaign Wants Church Lists




Begin forwarded message:

From: Jonathan Goldstein <JGoldstein@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: July 3, 2004 5:10:11 PM EDT
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [IP] Bush Campaign Wants Church Lists





Dave,

I'm a very active Republican living in Center City Philadelphia.  Every
year on Election Day, I work in the field organizing thousands of
voters.

What you've described is not something new, shocking or limited to
Republicans.  In Philadelphia, we've been watching in silence as
Democrats
have politicized churches for years.  The Black Clergy of Philadelphia,
an
organized group of black Philadelphia ministers, has for years been
arranging for Democratic politicians to leave their materials in the
churches, speak on Sundays at various churches and mingle with
congregants
at church social functions.  I would not consider it surprising at all
if
the Black Clergy of Philadelphia had extensively shared church member
lists
with politicians or with political consultants to facilitate get out the
vote drives, registration drives or direct mail or telephone
communication
with voters.

The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote an article about the phenomenon last
month:

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/8833024.htm

In said in pertinent part:

On the campaign trail, visiting a house of worship has become as
routine as
the county fair. Political activity has been a part of church life for
years, particularly in African American and predominantly Democratic
urban
congregations.
...

None of about a dozen area pastors contacted yesterday said they had
seen
the Bush appeal. Many of them did say, however, that political activity
has
been freewheeling in area churches for years.

The Rev. Wilson Goode, a former Philadelphia mayor, said he had
developed a
network of several hundred coordinators in churches during his 1983 and
1987 campaigns. He described a role akin to the Bush-Cheney coordinator.

"They were not the pastors, but were members who talked to other church
members for me," Goode, a Democrat, said.

Mayor Street received a similar boost last year with the strong backing
of
the 450-church Black Clergy of Philadelphia and Vicinity, a group
without
tax-exempt status that has endorsed candidates.

The Rev. Marguerite Handy, the group's general secretary and the
religious-outreach coordinator for Street's reelection campaign, asked
church leaders to host evening prayer vigils. About 40 were held in
church
sanctuaries, featuring preaching, prayer and "the mayor speaking from
his
heart."

--
Jonathan Goldstein
c: 215-266-5948



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              07/03/2004 01:20
Subject
              PM                        [IP] Bush Campaign Wants Church
                                        Lists

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___

Dave Farber  +1 412 726 9889



...... Forwarded Message .......
From: Kurt Albershardt <kurt@xxxxxx>
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Date: Sat, 03 Jul 2004 10:01:16 -0700
Subj: Bush Campaign Wants Church Lists

I thought for sure this one was a hoax, but it appears not...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
<http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/07/02/bush.churches.reut/>


WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- President Bush, seeking to mobilize religious
conservatives for his reelection campaign, has asked church-going
volunteers to turn over church membership directories, campaign
officials
said on Thursday.

In a move sharply criticized both by religious leaders and civil
libertarians, the Bush-Cheney campaign has issued a guide listing about
two-dozen "duties" and a series of deadlines for organizing support
among
conservative church congregations.
But the Rev. Richard Land, who deals with ethics and religious liberty
issues for the Southern Baptist Convention, a key Bush constituency,
said
he was "appalled."

"First of all, I would not want my church directories being used that
way,"

he told Reuters in an interview, predicting failure for the Bush plan.

The conservative Protestant denomination, whose 16 million members
strongly

backed Bush in 2000, held regular drives that encouraged church-goers to
"vote their values," said Land.

"But it's one thing for us to do that. It's a totally different thing
for a

partisan campaign to come in and try to organize a church. A lot of
pastors

are going to say: 'Wait a minute, bub'," he added.

The guide surfaced as a spate of opinion polls showed Bush's reelection
campaign facing a tough battle.

A Wall Street Journal/NBC poll showed Bush running neck-and-neck with
Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry among registered voters, 47
percent of whom said they now believed the president had misled
Americans
about the threat posed by Saddam Hussein's Iraq.

The Bush campaign has also been spending heavily on television ads,
only to

see the president's approval ratings slump to new lows.

Stanzel said the campaign ended the month of June with $64 million on
hand.

He had no figures on how much Bush has raised in June.

At the end of May, Bush had raised $213.4 million and spent all but $63
million.

The latest effort to marshal religious support also drew fire from civil
liberties activists concerned about the constitutional separation of
church

and state.

"Any coordination between the Bush campaign and church leaders would
clearly be illegal," said a statement from the activist group Americans
United for Separation of Church and State.

--







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