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Do Democrats Have a Religion Problem?

Do Democrats Have a Religion Problem?

“The administration was unnecessarily antagonistic toward religious conservatives”

The 2016 election exposed many cracks in the Democratic Party, not the least of which is their disconnection from the religious voter.

Former White House Advisor Michael Wear spoke to The Atlantic about the Democratic hostility towards religion and the religious:

There aren’t many people like Michael Wear in today’s Democratic Party. The former director of Barack Obama’s 2012 faith-outreach efforts is a theologically conservative evangelical Christian. He is opposed to both abortion and same-sex marriage, although he would argue that those are primarily theological positions, and other issues, including poverty and immigration, are also important to his faith.

During his time working for Obama, Wear was often alone in many of his views, he writes in his new book, Reclaiming Hope. He helped with faith-outreach strategies for Obama’s 2008 campaign, but was surprised when some state-level officials decided not to pursue this kind of engagement: “Sometimes—as I came to understand the more I worked in politics—a person’s reaction to religious ideas is not ideological at all, but personal,” he writes.

Several years later, he watched battles over abortion funding and contraception requirements in the Affordable Care Act with chagrin: The administration was unnecessarily antagonistic toward religious conservatives in both of those fights, Wear argues, and it eventually lost, anyway. When Louie Giglio, an evangelical pastor, was pressured to withdraw from giving the 2012 inaugural benediction because of his teachings on homosexuality, Wear almost quit.

The entire post is well worth the few minutes to read.

Follow Kemberlee on Twitter @kemberleekaye

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