Google Search

Showing posts with label Leaders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leaders. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Democrat leaders merge religion and party (Daily Caller)

Top Democratic legislators are promising to harness religion to help them win 2012 voters, and are also declaring that the Democratic Party’s actions are the expression of their religious obligations.

“The Democrats’ values and core agenda, and President Obama’s accomplishments, are reflective of the tenets and teachings and lessons of my faith as a Jewish woman… [and] no, there aren’t things that are informed by my faith than are different from the values and ideals of the Democratic Party,” said Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz.

Wasserman Schultz and other Democrats, including Rep. James Clyburn, spoke at a Nov. 30 press event in the DNC’s headquarters intended to promote the party’s 2012 religious outreach.

When asked by The Daily Caller if the party’s blending of religion and politics is blurring distinctions between church and state, Clyburn said, “We are in recognition of the fundamental aspect of all of the great religions … love, the golden rule, of doing unto others as you would have be done unto you.”

A Washington Post reporter how the Democrats planned to work with black churches. In “the African American community, the church vote is very important… [but] the support for the president may not be as strong as it was,” the Post’s reporter said.

“As we organize going forward to next year,” Clyburn responded, “there will be be significant efforts on our part to reconnect the fundamentals of our policies to the [religious] teachings that we all learned, be it in the Old Testament or the New Testament.”

In the past, “we were so strong in our doctrine that there ought to be a separation of church and state, that we often took it to an extreme, and I thinks that’s how we got disconnected” from voters, said Clyburn, who heads the House Democrats’ Religious Outreach Committee, established after the party lost the 2004 presidential race.

“I speak with faith leaders every day, and a number of African American faith leaders,” said Rev. Derrick Harkins, the director of faith outreach at the DNC. “I find the issue is not a lack of enthusiasm, but the question is often raised ‘How can we be effective in this election cycle?’”

This use of religion for political purposes “will work with the less discerning” religious voters, said Richard Land, director of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission. But, he warned, “whenever you employ religion to justify your own positions, which may or may not be biblical, it cheapens and desacrilizes religion.”

In 2006, Obama declared at a campaign rally that he started going to church after hearing a sermon from Jeremiah Wright, a controversial, politically connected, black reverend in Chicago. The sermon, Obama said, said, “‘The world as it is is not the world as it has to be,’ … [and] I loved that idea in my own life because I thought that’s a philosophy I believe.” (RELATED: Obama in 2006: ‘I stole’ book title ‘Audacity of Hope’ from Rev. Wright, ‘my pastor’)

In Obama’s 2011 Thanksgiving address,  he sidelined any reference to God, instead saying that Americans’ rights to freely speak, vote, assemble and own property depends on the approval of other Americans. “No matter how tough things are right now, we still give thanks for that most American of blessings, the chance to determine our own destiny,” he said.

Obama, however, did use biblical language to bolster the Democrats’ support for entitlements: “This sense of mutual responsibility — the idea that I am my brother’s keeper; that I am my sister’s keeper — has always been a part of what makes our country special,” Obama said. “If we keep that spirit alive, if we support each other, and look out for each other, and remember that we’re all in this together, then I know that we too will overcome the challenges of our time.”

“I would look at what Barack Obama’s policies and practices are, rather than what he may have or may not have mentioned,” Clyburn told TheDC. “I believe the president’s speech was very appropriate,” he continued, because, “The first Thanksgiving was all about celebrating a freedom to worship in one’s own fashion. … They gathered to give thanks not to any one God, but to give thanks in celebration of some omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent being.”

The meal was shared between Indians and the Pilgrims, who were members of a specific sect of English Protestants who worshiped the Christian God described in the Bible.

Speakers also caricatured Republicans’ beliefs as heartless and un-Christian.

A new generation of “values voters,” said Young Democrats of America President Rod Snyder, “will reject the GOP’s fend-for-yourself theology that would roll back health care benefits for younger Americans and deny quality education, all while preserving tax breaks for the wealthiest 2 percent.”

“If your philosophy is to take away from the needy in order to give to the greedy,” said Clyburn, “that’s anathema to my Christian faith.”

Land predicted the Democrats’ emphasis on religious will rise as the 2012 election gets closer. Obama’s speech “had all kinds of religious allusions when he ran for president, but since then they’ve disappeared,” he said. “He’s now playing golf instead of going to Church.”

All is forgiven, Meghan McCain

Democrat leaders merge religion and party

Team Huntsman stresses conservative record; pushes back on moderate meme

Norquist: 'Sen. Coburn was suffering from Stockholm Syndrome'

Romney aide laments fall of Cain: 'He keeps Perry down'


View the original article here

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Democrat Leaders Join Forces and Finally Call for Weiner's Resignation (ContributorNetwork)

NBC has reported that, despite the response on Friday by Democratic House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Anthony Weiner's scandalous behavior and the initial efforts of DNC Chairwoman Rep. Debbie Wasserman Shultz to downplay the significance of Weiner, Wasserman Shultz, Pelosi and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chair Steve Israel released statements within minutes of each other today calling for the disgraced congressman's resignation.

Where Democratic leaders had previously ridden the Weiner fence, revelations that a 17-year old girl was among the many females who have been receiving personal communications from the congressman has officially inspired enough panic to motivate a hasty, unified decision.

According to an exclusive report by Fox News, police in New Castle, Del., are investigating their discovery of direct online communications between Weiner and a 17-year-old girl.

According to the report by Jana Winter, two New Castle County police officers arrived at the high school junior's home on Friday while foxnews.com was speaking with a family member. After being asked to step outside, the 17-year old was seen walking up the driveway. Because she is a minor, her name is being withheld. However, when fox.com inquired, the 17-year old said, "I'm doing OK."

According to Jennifer Preston of the New York Times, Weiner's spokeswoman, Risa Heller said, "According to Congressman Weiner, his communications with this person were neither explicit nor indecent." However, Heller did not provide copies of the messages.

Of course, that Weiner first denied the "bulging underwear" photo was him then lied to say his Twitter account was hacked, any denials from Weiner or those in his camp would understandably be considered suspect.

Preston also reported that a family member, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, characterized the messages as "harmless" but did express concern. While the family was aware of the exchanges between Weiner and the girl before the scandal erupted, they assumed all of their conversations had taken place on a public Twitter feed.

However, according to the New York Times, Weiner started following the girl's personal profile page two days after she signed up for his Twitter feed. After seeing her profile message that she hopes to be president someday, "How hip am I talking to a future president?" Weiner responded directly.

A group of conservatives who had been following Weiner's Twitter feed became concerned, firing off public Twitter warnings and even contacting the 17-year-old girl directly. Only after the minor told Weiner she was being bothered did he apologize and stopped following her on Twitter. But a month later, after an online shout-out by Weiner for more followers, the girl reminded him she used to follow him. On May 16, fully aware that the girl was a minor, he started following her again and a relative told the Times that Weiner exchanged messages with the girl for almost two weeks after that.

After being caught sending shirtless photos to a woman he met on Craigslist, Republican Rep. Chris Lee stepped down. Democrat, Kathy Hochul won a special election in New York's 26th congressional district to replace Lee. In the wake of the historic drubbing in the 2010 midterm elections, Democrats like Wasserman Schultz hailed the victory as a turning point for their party.

As quoted by ABC, "The reason that we believe that this is an indicator that we will continue to make progress and retake majority of the House and re-elect the president is that the voters got a glimpse of what it would be like under Republican control," Schultz said last month . "And they don't like it."

Today's frenzied response by Democrat leaders reveals their final grasp that, on top of President Barack Obama's tanking poll numbers, the sexcapades of Weiner may have given their "hailed turning point" a seriously official 180.


View the original article here