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CBS report on "values voters" and "Patriot Pastors" failed to note recent disclosures by Kuo of Bush White House contempt for Christian conservatives

October 23, 2006 5:55 pm ET

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SUMMARY: CBS News correspondent Lee Cowan reported on "a thousand 'Patriot Pastors' from conservative churches all across Ohio, who want their congregations out of their pews and in the polling places," claiming that church involvement in politics "may well be a get-out-the-vote effort that could once again be the answer to conservatives' prayers." But Cowan's report did not mention disclosures in a newly released book that the Bush White House has pandered to Christian conservatives for votes while breaking promises on policy and denigrating them behind closed doors.

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On the October 22 edition of the CBS Evening News, correspondent Lee Cowan reported on "a thousand 'Patriot Pastors' from conservative churches all across Ohio who want their congregations out of their pews and in the polling places." Cowan claimed that "churches are picking up the slack" for politicians who are not discussing the "issues of abortion, euthanasia, infanticide or gay marriage," and that "if it's anything like two years ago, it may well be a get-out-the-vote effort that could once again be the answer to conservatives' prayers." But Cowan's report did not mention disclosures in a newly released book that the Bush White House has pandered to Christian conservatives for votes while breaking promises on policy and referring to them as "the nuts," "insane," and "ridiculous" behind closed doors. Those disclosures are made in Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of Political Seduction (Free Press, October 2006) by David Kuo, former deputy director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.

As Media Matters for America has noted, in the book, Kuo described ways in which the Bush White House manipulated and lied to Christian conservatives; alleged that Bush and White House senior adviser Karl Rove lied to Christian conservatives about the amount of money the Bush administration had made available for faith-based charities; and detailed the White House's privately dismissive attitudes toward the Christian right.

The "Patriot Pastors" program is an initiative of the conservative Ohio Restoration Project, although, as People for the American Way documented, the concept has expanded to other states. Its goal is for each participating pastor to register 300 new "value voters" and recruit 200 "Minutemen" to volunteer to work in their community and on political campaigns. The Ohio Restoration Project is headed by Columbus, Ohio, pastor Russell Johnson, whom Cowan featured in his report.

From the October 22 edition of the CBS Evening News:

COWAN: The music is infectious at Pastor Russell Johnson's church, where parishioners are as loyal to his prayer as they are to his politics.

JOHNSON: When the Lord returns, he will not be on Air Force One.

COWAN: He's one of a group of about a thousand "Patriot Pastors" from conservative churches all across Ohio who want their congregations out of their pews and in the polling places.

JOHNSON: The life of the church should get out from behind the stained-glass windows, get out, get informed, vote. It's part of our stewardship.

COWAN: In 2004, the president benefited from that. Evangelical Christians turned out in droves, driven in part by a desire to support a flurry of constitutional amendments banning same-sex marriage. They got a nickname: the values voter.

They quickly became one of the most reliable voting blocs the Republicans could ask for. The question, though, is: Will value voters be valuable this year, too?

Do you think people are as excited to come out and vote this time around?

JOHNSON: I think we're going to have to work hard.

COWAN: The [former Rep. Mark] Foley [R-FL] mess hasn't helped. It's been a gut-wrenching turnoff to many of the faithful.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I think there has always been, like, a general disgust with Washington.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: It's frustrating, really, yeah, very. You put trust in somebody, yeah.

COWAN: A CBS News/New York Times poll suggests that support from values voters for Republican candidates may be softening. In Ohio's tough Senate race, only about half of white evangelicals back Republican candidate Mike DeWine. More than a third say they're voting for Democrat Sherrod Brown. Fourteen percent are still undecided. Something is different this election cycle.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: What's [Ohio Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ted] Strickland's stand on abortion?

COWAN: While voters here are talking values, the politicians are talking Iraq and the economy instead.

CHRIS LONG [director of the Ohio Christian Alliance]: There's many on the left that are waiting for the value voter to die.

COWAN: Which worries conservative talk radio hosts like Chris Long.

LONG: We noticed that in a number of the debates that are held of the candidates, that issues of abortion, euthanasia, infanticide, or gay marriage are not addressed in those debates.

COWAN: So churches are picking up the slack. Politics in the pulpit may make some uncomfortable, but if it's anything like two years ago, it may well be a get-out-the-vote effort that could once again be the answer to conservatives' prayers. Lee Cowan, CBS News, Columbus.

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    • Author by nerzog (October 23, 2006 6:01 pm ET)
         

      Kuo is really a Democratic operative who is trying to cash in on a book right before the election and nobody else in the administration heard any of this so he must be a liar.

      That's what Karl sez, and if Karl sez it's so...it's so.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by clore3090 (October 23, 2006 6:27 pm ET)
         

      If the story about the Bush administration using the Fundies in this cynical way is true, then the Bushies must be more rational than we thought.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by shrubshredder47158 (October 23, 2006 7:50 pm ET)
         

      These insufferable swine, counterfeit Christians are over. Psycho Tony Perkins started his Family Research Council with a list he bought from David Duke. Yeah, that David Duke. That's the cornerstone of his pitiful little organization. They're kukluxkristians.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by left of center (October 23, 2006 10:19 pm ET)
         

      if any of these "patriot pastors" churches will lose their tax exempt status for endorsing political candidates?? Where's the story on that?

      Report Abuse
      • Author by rusty shackleford (October 24, 2006 9:27 am ET)
           

        Get these political organizations - woops, I mean churches - off the welfare rolls. Revoke their tax-exempt status!

        Report Abuse
      • Author by worrierking (October 24, 2006 12:03 pm ET)
           

        They've issued a summons to All Saints Episcopal Church in Pasadena, Calif for taking a political stand in the 2004 election. Of course, the church is a progressive one. How dare they not toe the official line and stand up for war, lower taxes, Jesus and GWB?

        Report Abuse
    • Author by nerzog (October 24, 2006 1:09 pm ET)
         

      Just as they've done with the media, the GOP has commandeered Conservative Troglodyte churches all over the country to do its bidding. They use their tax-exempt resources to mobilize Republican voters and get them to the polls. It should cost these churches their tax-exempt status, but it won't.

      This is why I doubt a Democratic takeover in November...Rove's machine is just too powerful and too well-funded.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by nerzog (October 24, 2006 1:14 pm ET)
           

        It's not likely to have the hoped-for impact on the troglodytes. I know many of these people, and they don't care about anything but what they've been told to care about...prayer in school, abortion, the gay agenda, the Ten Commandments displays, the bogus "war on Christmas"...in essence, the culture war. They don't give a rat's butt that Bush lied to them, that Cheney lied to them, that Rumsfeld lied to them, that we're wasting billions of dollars and thousands of young lives in Iraq...they just don't care. It'a all about getting another troglodyte on the Supreme Court.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by pick of the litter (October 24, 2006 1:58 pm ET)
             

          Nerzog, please keep hope alive. Your sentiment is just what the RNC would love everyone to believe. Remember that PEOPLE POWER trumps illusionary trickery and an end to Republican hegemony is truly in the realm of possiblities now. The smell of desperation in the air is thickening daily.

          Report Abuse
          • Author by nerzog (October 24, 2006 3:19 pm ET)
               

            But I got burned in 2000 and 2004 because I dared to hope Americans would reject fascism. Actually, I think the majority of Americans did, but the fix was in. I'm afraid that the same machinery that stole the last three elections is even more entrenched now. They've had years to perfect it. Don't forget that Karl Rove has a goal of establishing permanent Republican domination. He's only a frog's hair away from success. If they hold on to the Congress, count on at least one more Supreme Court vacancy before 2008. Once they put the fifth Troglodyte on the Court, we're screwed.

            If the Dems take the House back, I'll be the first to jump up and declare myself a paranoid fool.

            Report Abuse
            • Author by pick of the litter (October 24, 2006 4:05 pm ET)
                 

              is like being in love, Nerzog. You can never give up hope, no matter how many times your heart is broken. Keep your chin up, though I share your pain. Apathy is forever knocking on the door because our political system is so broken.

              "I get knocked down, I get up again, You're never going to keep me down " think of that ole Will Smith tune as your motto.

              Report Abuse

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