God-O-Meter

God-O-Meter

The Economy as a Values Issue. Will it Work?

posted by dgilgoff | 8:59am Thursday September 25, 2008

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dollarsign.jpgSince 2004, Democrats have been working to frame economic concerns as values issues. A good example was the wave of state ballot initiatives to raise the minimum wage in 2006, in which liberal religious groups played a leading role. That campaign was a big success.

Still, God-o-Meter has been skeptical to the degree to which Democrats can convince voters that the economy is a values issue on par with the more visceral issues that have benefited the Christian Right: abortion, gay marriage, prayer in schools, etc.

That skepticism informed GOM’s reading of today’s AP article describing Barack Obama’s and other Democrats’ efforts to call the nation’s current economic woes and financial crises as values issues:

Now, with U.S. financial systems in turmoil and the government rushing to fix them, Democrats sense an opportunity to highlight the economy as a values issue and attract middle-of-the-road religious believers who were central to President Bush’s winning coalition in 2004.

For years, more liberal faith leaders have tried to elevate fighting poverty at home and abroad onto the values agenda. What’s changed is that an increasing number of voters are seeing suffering not just in the streets but in the mirror.

That’s not all that’s changed.

In previous election cycles, when Democrats cried “values!” over economic issues, lots of religious leaders and ordinary religious folks viewed its as pure window dressing on policy prescriptions that had little to do with religious convictions. It seemed that Democrats were mentioning values only when it suited their political self-interest.

What makes this electon cycle different is that the Democrats, with Obama at the helm, have spent years trying to show the American people that faith and values matter to them big time, and not just voting on the budget for food stamps and it behooves them to start calling budget requests “moral documents.”

So Democrats may have more credibility among religious voters than they did a few years ago. And now that so many of those voters are feeling such acute economic pain, voting for a Democrat might not seem as morally objectionable as it did several years ago.

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With Election Day finally having come and gone, God-o-Meter is closing up shop till 2012--or at least 2010. Till then, get your faith and politics fix over at Beliefnet editor-in-chief Steve Waldman's blog. 7

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The first priorities for Barack Obama's administration will be the economy and a variety of foreign policy issues. But the burgeoning religious left, which worked so hard to get Obama elected, expects some movement on its issues, including a robust White House office of faith-based initiatives, pove

posted 1:49:31pm Nov. 07, 2008 | read full post »

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God-o-Meter wrote a piece for today's Roll Call on the vindication of Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean's much-derided 50-State Strategy, which is largely about reaching out to the nation's more religious voters in the red states: Years before Barack Obama showed that a liberal Demo

posted 2:01:06pm Nov. 06, 2008 | read full post »

A Post-Election Chat with Ralph Reed
Amid today's talk that Barack Obama has narrowed the God Gap, God-o-Meter checked in with Ralph Reed, who spearheaded religious outreach for George W. Bush's 2000 and 2004 campaigns and who pioneered such outreach for Republicans as executive director of the Christian Coalition. What surprised you i

posted 3:09:07pm Nov. 05, 2008 | read full post »

More Innacurate Faith Storylines From the Media
God-o-Meter is struck by the number of faith-based storylines the news media appear to have gotten dead wrong this year. One was the line that Obama was poised to make big gains among white votes, especially evangelicals, who were undergoing a generational shift in their political thinking and reexa

posted 11:53:20am Nov. 05, 2008 | read full post »

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Comments read comments(2)
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Charles Cosimano

posted September 25, 2008 at 11:32 am


It will work only in the sense that the only value that matters to the voters is the value of the dollars they have.



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jestrfyl

posted September 25, 2008 at 11:46 am


The economy is by definition a values question. Simply put, “What do you value?” or even more simply, “For what will you pay?” This has a huge moral stripe right down the middle of it. Anyone who tries to frame it as anything but a question of values is simply attempting to camouflage their own suspect agenda.
See the piece about the vatican’s comments on the Western banking crisis. The author of that article is spot on. Because we have allowed the moral center of our economy to collapse our once mighty economy is getting shredded like a hurricane drifting across mountains. The eye of our economy has long disappeared and now we are, at best, a mere storm blowing itself out to a breeze. Until we relaim a moral, values center – emphasizing the value of work and human contact over indirect and facelss administration – our economic storm will not even register as a rainy day.



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