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St. Louis - By a series of recent initiatives, Republicans have
transformed our party into the political arm of conservative Christians.
The elements of this transformation have included advocacy of a
constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, opposition to stem
cell research involving both frozen embryos and human cells in petri
dishes, and the extraordinary effort to keep Terri Schiavo hooked
up to a feeding tube.
Standing alone, each of these initiatives has its advocates, within
the Republican Party and beyond. But the distinct elements do not
stand alone. Rather they are parts of a larger package, an agenda
of positions common to conservative Christians and the dominant
wing of the Republican Party.
Christian activists, eager to take credit for recent electoral successes,
would not be likely to concede that Republican adoption of their
political agenda is merely the natural convergence of conservative
religious and political values. Correctly, they would see a causal
relationship between the activism of the churches and the responsiveness
of Republican politicians. In turn, pragmatic Republicans would
agree that motivating Christian conservatives has contributed to
their successes.
High-profile Republican efforts to prolong the life of Ms. Schiavo,
including departures from Republican principles like approving Congressional
involvement in private decisions and empowering a federal court
to overrule a state court, can rightfully be interpreted as yielding
to the pressure of religious power blocs.
In my state, Missouri, Republicans in the General Assembly have
advanced legislation to criminalize even stem cell research in which
the cells are artificially produced in petri dishes and will never
be transplanted into the human uterus. They argue that such cells
are human life that must be protected, by threat of criminal prosecution,
from promising research on diseases like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's
and juvenile diabetes.
It is not evident to many of us that cells in a petri dish are equivalent
to identifiable people suffering from terrible diseases. I am and
have always been pro-life. But the only explanation for legislators
comparing cells in a petri dish to babies in the womb is the extension
of religious doctrine into statutory law.
I do not fault religious people for political action. Since Moses
confronted the pharaoh, faithful people have heard God's call to
political involvement. Nor has political action been unique to conservative
Christians. Religious liberals have been politically active in support
of gay rights and against nuclear weapons and the death penalty.
In America, everyone has the right to try to influence political
issues, regardless of his religious motivations.
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The problem is not with people or churches that are politically
active. It is with a party that has gone so far in adopting a sectarian
agenda that it has become the political extension of a religious
movement.
When government becomes the means of carrying out a religious program,
it raises obvious questions under the First Amendment. But even
in the absence of constitutional issues, a political party should
resist identification with a religious movement. While religions
are free to advocate for their own sectarian causes, the work of
government and those who engage in it is
to hold together as one people a very diverse country. At its best,
religion can be a uniting influence, but in practice, nothing is
more divisive. For politicians to advance the cause of one religious
group is often to oppose the cause of another.
Take stem cell research. Criminalizing the work of scientists doing
such research would give strong support to one religious doctrine,
and it would punish people who believe it is their religious duty
to use science to heal the sick.
During the 18 years I served in the Senate, Republicans often disagreed
with each other. But there was much that held us together. We believed
in limited government, in keeping light the burden of taxation and
regulation. We encouraged the private sector, so that a free economy
might thrive. We believed that judges should interpret the law,
not legislate. We were internationalists who supported an engaged
foreign policy, a strong national defense and free trade. These
were principles shared by virtually all Republicans.
But in recent times, we Republicans have allowed this shared agenda
to become secondary to the agenda of Christian conservatives. As
a senator, I worried every day about the size of the federal deficit.
I did not spend a single minute worrying about the effect of gays
on the institution of marriage. Today it seems to be the other way
around.
The historic principles of the Republican Party offer America its
best hope for a prosperous and secure future. Our current fixation
on a religious agenda has turned us in the wrong direction. It is
time for Republicans to rediscover our roots.
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