Below The Beltway

I believe in the free speech that liberals used to believe in, the economic freedom that conservatives used to believe in, and the personal freedom that America used to believe in.

[powered by WordPress.]

McCain And The Christian Right

by @ 5:13 pm on March 20, 2008.

Lawrence Eagleburger, a McCain supporter who has appeared on his behalf throughout the campaign, said this about the power of the religious right:

Eagleburger bluntly contradicted McCain on at least one major issue of concern to the Republican Party: the role of the religious right. McCain has spent two years making nice with the likes of Jerry Falwell and John Hagee, repenting for referring to Falwell and Pat Robertson as “agents of intolerance” back in 2000. Yet Eagleburger seemed to suggest that we shouldn’t take McCain’s embrace of the religious right too seriously.

“On the Christian hard right, I live in Charlottesville now and I can’t tell you I’m surrounded by it,” Eagleburger said. “I must tell you we fought it there, fought hard against it. There’s no question that in the Republican Party it is a serious problem…Among the hard-right conservatives in the Republican Party John McCain was, shall we say, less than enthusiastically received…What you see is what you get. You are not going to see him moving to assuage the concerns of these conservatives.

“The issues that have concerned the far right I don’t see and I don’t expect to see any changes. I know there will be some people in his entourage who will want to advocate for those changes, and again, I don’t believe he will shift on those fundamental issues. For example, on abortion, he’s clear, he’s opposed. On one of the issues that upsets the far right, stem cell research, he is prepared to accept some of that, and that’s something that upsets the far right. I could go on with these issues.” Too bad he didn’t.

Especially when you have one representative of the Family Research Council spouting nonsense like this:

“I would much prefer to export homosexuals from the United States than to import them into the United States because we believe homosexuality is destructive to society,” - Peter Sprigg, Family Research Council.

Forced deportation, huh ? Very Christian of you.

Related Posts

One Response to “McCain And The Christian Right”

  1. John Jameson Says:

    Reminds me of one of the discussions in the movie “JESUS WAS A TERRORIST”

    Has anyone else seen it? I’m curious to know who of us were offended vs. who of us were grateful that it came out.

[powered by WordPress.]