Spiritual Politics

Done, and Done

By Mark Silk — March 11, 2008
The Catholic League is satisfied with John McCain’s repudiation of “any comments that are made, including Pastor Hagee’s, if they are anti-Catholic or offensive to Catholics.” As in this from Donohue: “Sen. McCain has done the right thing and we salute him for doing so. As far as the Catholic League is concerned, this case […]

Buckeye evangelicals

By Mark Silk — March 10, 2008
The conference call didn’t leave me with much more to say about the Zogby poll of Ohio evangelicals. While I don’t doubt the anecdotal evidence that white evangelicals are more in play this year than they’ve been in several election cycles, the evidence for party switching, based on these polls, has to be considered inconclusive. […]

McCain to go to Israel

By rvineis — March 10, 2008
John McCain will travel to Israel next week in an effort to secure Jewish support in the U.S. and to show off his foreign policy credentials.

End of an Era?

By Mark Silk — March 10, 2008
In yesterday’s Washington Post, E. J. Dionne postulates the end of the era of the Religious Right: R.R. RIP, 1980-2008. I’m inclined to agree, with a bit of caution, inasmuch as liberal journalists have been announcing the Religious Right’s demise ever since the early 1980s. Less persuasive is Dionne’s grand periodization of the political past […]

Nothing New

By rvineis — March 9, 2008
Nicholas Kristof has a worthwhile piece in today’s NYT about the bigotry surrounding Obama. Kristof puts these recent events into a historical context noting that racist smears seem to be one of America’s favorite pastimes. On race: There is a parallel with presidential campaigns in the 19th and early 20th centuries, when one of the […]

More Hageeography

By Mark Silk — March 9, 2008
After my last post on the purported anti-Catholicism of John Hagee, I spoke with Mary Navarro Farr, a San Antonio woman who spent seven years at Hagee’s church a quarter-century ago. While she never formally joined the church, she sang in its choir, went on a trip to Israel led by Hagee, and generally functioned […]

Evangelical Democrats, Ohio Style

By Mark Silk — March 8, 2008
Jim Wallis and Zogby were at it again last week, coming in behind the exit polls to discern the white evangelical vote in the Democratic primary in Ohio. According to the email teaser, these folks favored Clinton over Obama 57 percent to 35 percent. That’s a significant finding, given that white Protestants as a whole […]

McHagee Lives

By Mark Silk — March 7, 2008
With the March 4 primaries out of the way, it’s clear that the John McCain/John Hagee endorsement story is not going away any time soon. Egged on by reporters, Nancy Pelosi has joined in the chorus of condemnation. Liberal Catholic groups like Catholics United have added their voices to the call by Bill Donohue of […]

The Real Huck

By Mark Silk — March 6, 2008
Jim Wallis looks for Mike Huckabee to step up as the leader of a new, more enlightened engaged evangelicalism. As noted in this place earlier, I’m a bit of a skeptic on that proposition. The question to be answered is whether the real Huck is the pre- or the post-New Hampshire Primary Huck. Pre-, as […]

Bullet dodged

By Mark Silk — March 6, 2008
While the eyes of Texas (and the rest of the nation) were upon Clinton and Obama, a Cleburne urologist named Barney Maddox was spending a lot of money on fancy mailings to try to oust incumbent Pat Hardy as the GOP candidate for the District 11 seat on the Texas state school board. Given the […]

The Catholic Vote

By Mark Silk — March 5, 2008
Out of yesterday’s Democratic primaries, the religion question that has struck–perhaps confounded–me is: Does Obama actually have a Catholic problem? If you simply take Catholics and Protestants, state by state, it would seem that he does. But that’s largely because the African-Americans are counted among the Protestants. Take them away, and what we’re mostly left […]

Golden Oldie

By Mark Silk — March 4, 2008
Hail, Huck, and Farewell. For now.

Tuesday Night Exits

By rvineis — March 4, 2008
Here are the exit polls from the Democratic races. More detailed analysis to come. Rhode Island– Hillary beat Obama with Catholics 60%-40%. Texas– Again Clinton won Catholics and Hispanics. Obama won Protestant weekly attendees. Vermont-Obama swept all categories. Ohio-Hillary won all Christians and levels of attendance.

Huckabee Bows Out

By rvineis — March 4, 2008
Right now, Mike Huckabee is dropping out of the race. Huckabee’s speech has been consistent with what made him so popular in the first place, his appeal to conservative Christians. Along with analogies to the battle of the Alamo, he peppered his announcement with quotations from the good book. Huckabee talked about his humble roots […]

The asshole from Texas

By Mark Silk — March 4, 2008
If Chuck’s the schmuck from New York, what does that make Rev. Land?
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