Keeping the Faith-Based
by
Dennis R. Hoover
In a January 30, 2008
column in the Washington Post, Michael Gerson bemoaned the fact that
“compassionate conservatism” seemed to be a “cause without a constituency.”
“The conservative
movement views it as a heresy,” concluded Gerson, “while liberals and
Democrats shun it because of its association with George W. Bush.” Yet the
following July, a key policy that Bush had successfully branded as
compassionate conservative—the faith-based initiative—found an important new
constituent: Barack Obama.
At a July 1 campaign
appearance in Zanesville, Ohio (a conservative region of what then appeared
to be a critically important swing state), Obama pledged to continue the
faith-based initiative:
“We need all hands on
deck. I’m not saying faith-based groups are an alternative to government and
secular nonprofits. And I’m not saying they’re somehow better at lifting
people up. What I’m saying is that we all have to work together—Christian
and Jew, Hindu and Muslim, believer and non-believer alike—to meet the
challenges of the 21st century.”
Candidate Obama did,
however, try to distinguish his own faith-based plan from that of the
sitting president. He charged that Bush’s White House Office of Faith-Based
and Community Initiatives never fulfilled its promise, in part because the
Bush administration’s overall spending on social services was insufficient,
and in part because the office had been politicized. To bolster the latter
charge, Obama noted that “former officials in the Office have described how
it was used to promote partisan interests”—a reference to former White House
official David Kuo’s 2006 exposé, Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of
Political Seduction.
Obama also indicated
that he would approach the issue of religious hiring rights very differently
than had President Bush. Whereas Bush had insisted on the right of
faith-based organizations that accept government funds for social service
programs to use religion as a criterion in hiring, Obama declared that “if
you get a federal grant, you can’t use that grant money to proselytize to
the people you help and you can’t discriminate against them—or against the
people you hire—on the basis of their religion.”
Obama’s Zanesville
embrace of the faith-based initiative was not a major media event. His
campaign had already established a pattern of energetic (by Democratic Party
standards) outreach to faith-based communities in general, and to
center-leaning evangelicals in particular. So perhaps journalists thought
the novelty value was low.
Obama also had ample
precedent for his remarks. Democratic presidential candidates Bill Clinton,
Al Gore, and Hilary Clinton had all claimed centrist cred by rhetorically
aligning themselves with faith-based social service organizations.
The aspect of the
Zanesville speech that did attract some attention was the issue of hiring
rights. Some interpreted Obama’s speech as a move to the center despite the
bright line he said he wanted to draw on hiring.
“Prior to today, the danger was that Democrats might revert to old secular
biases and end the faith-based program altogether, preferring only public
sector approaches as the remedy to poverty instead of also forging vital
partnerships with civil society that include the faith community,”
progressive evangelical Jim Wallis wrote in his July 2 Huffington Post
column. “[I]t’s significant he’s taking a Bush proposal and building on it,
Beliefnet’s Steven Waldman told Electra Draper of the Denver Post
July 14. “He says he’s a post-partisan guy. Here’s an example of that.”
Draper found others,
however, who saw the speech as confirming rather than defying the stereotype
of Democratic secularist bias. David Nammo, executive director of FRCAction,
an arm of the Family Research Council, quipped that Obama was trying to
rewrite the Book of James from “Faith without works is dead” to “Works
without faith is preferred.” Another critical voice was that of David Kuo
himself, who told Draper that opposing religious hiring rights “was a dumb
move by Obama. Obama risked alienating every evangelical he was reaching out
to.”
In retrospect it is
clear that in the months following Zanesville evangelicals and others who
favor preserving hiring rights of faith-based organizations did indeed make
their potential alienation known to the Obama campaign. This may have had
something to do with the more carefully calibrated language Obama used at
Rick Warren’s presidential forum August 16:
“What we do want to
make sure of is that as a general principle we’re not using federal funding
to discriminate, but that is only when it comes to the narrow program that
is being funded by the federal government. That does not affect any of the
other ministries that are taking place.”
Through Election Day,
the faith-based initiative largely receded into the background of media
coverage. While it formally sided with those defending religious hiring
rights, the McCain campaign did not attempt to score major points with the
issue.
Not long after Obama’s
inaug-uration, however, the question returned to the foreground. Speaking at
the National Prayer Breakfast on February 5, the new president announced the
creation of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood
Partnerships (OFANP), a revamped and renamed version of Bush’s “Faith-Based
and Community Initiatives” office. Two aspects of the announcement were
especially newsworthy.
First, whereas Bush’s
initiative had focused mainly on social services for the poor, Obama
intended to give it a broader role in policy development. A new 25-member
Advisory Council would be created for that purpose. In addition to poverty
reduction, other priorities would include reducing the need for abortion,
encouraging responsible fatherhood, and working with the National Security
Council on international interfaith dialogue.
Second, OFANP was
given a formal mechanism for seeking the advice of the Attorney General’s
office on “difficult legal and constitutional issues” on a case-by-case
basis. In other words, instead of announcing any new measures to
institutionalize new standards on religious hiring or other controversial
issues, the Obama administration decided to let the status quo stand, though
leaving open the possibility of revising policies in the future in response
to specific problems that might arise.
This shift to a
case-by-case approach was a clear climb-down from the Zanesville speech, and
as such it attracted a considerable volume of media coverage and commentary.
Institutionalizing ambiguity left both sides of the hiring dispute with hope
that they would ultimately prevail—a move that was politically either astute
or clumsy.
Writing in Time
February 5, Amy Sullivan opted for the latter. The Zanesville speech had
“caused an immediate uproar within the ranks of Obama’s religious
supporters, who pushed him to back off from the promise to undo Bush’s
Executive Order. He has not done so publicly, but several of them insist
that Obama and his aides have given them private assurances that there will
be no rapid movement to change the status quo with regard to religious
hiring. If so, it would be a rare case of political ham-handedness by the
Obama team, because his secular supporters say they have been assured that
the hiring change will take place.”
Some evangelicals were
optimistic in the wake of the National Prayer Breakfast. A few evangelicals
who strongly support religious hiring (e.g., Jim Wallis, World Vision
president Richard Stearns, Florida megachurch pastor Joel Hunter) were among
the first 15 members appointed to the OFANP Advisory.
“Sounds to me like
team Obama is trying to strike a sensible middle ground and see where all of
this leads,” wrote Christian Broadcasting Network commentator David Brody on
February 5. Joe Mettimano, VP for Advocacy at World Vision, told U.S.
News and World Report’s Dan Gilgoff February 6 that the president “is
taking a very practical and responsible approach to the whole issue of
faith-based initiatives, including religious hiring rights.”
Others still had
serious concerns. In a February 9 commentary piece in Christianity Today,
Stephen Monsma and Stanley Carlson-Thies said that Obama’s initiative was
off to a “promising start,” but worried about the president’s unwillingness
to acknowledge what they regard as a clear constitutional principle
supporting religious hiring rights.
The Weekly Standard’s
Joseph Loconte took a harder line, based on the assumption that the Obama
administration had not really softened its opposition to religious hiring
rights. In a March 2 piece titled “Faith-Based Confusion,” Loconte argued
that “if Planned Parenthood—which receives about $336 million in government
grants and contracts—were denied the right to exclude pro-life Catholics
from employment, its lawyers would be mobilizing like locusts.” Chuck Colson
likewise sounded an alarm about threats to faith-based hiring during an
interview with Mike Huckabee on Fox News Channel February 28.
Commentators on the
left were also unhappy about the ambiguity, particularly since they thought
Obama had articulated a clear stance in Zanesville. On February 6, Kathryn
Kolbert, president of People for the American Way, told the Boston Globe’s
Joseph Williams that Obama “made a promise on the campaign trail to [end
hiring discrimination]. He should have done that.” Writing on the Huffington
Post February 18, Reese Schonfeld argued that “Obama appears to be running
scared—scared of the Republican minority in Congress, scared of faith-based
groups, scared of boldness.”
The editorial boards
of the New York Times, Washington Post, and Los Angeles
Times all agreed with the liberal critique. For example, the New York
Times’ February 16 editorial, slugged “Faith-Based Fudging,” declared,
“The case-by-case review seems destined to confuse as much as to enlighten.
And it is hardly the clear commitment to proper employment practices Mr.
Obama voiced as a candidate, and the Constitution requires.”
An exception to that
editorial pattern came from the Christian Science Monitor, which said
February 6 that while Obama’s case-by-case approach ducked the hard
questions, ducking them was wise—because, “with the economy on the skids,
now is not the time to cause a revolt among religious groups helping those
in need.”
The end of the Bush
administration has not closed the book, then, on the faith-based initiative.
The story began before
Bush—with the “charitable choice” provision of the 1996 welfare reform bill,
to be precise. It will continue, with many legal and political twists and
turns in the plot still to be revealed. The only question is how long it
will take for various cases and controversies to come to a head under the
Obama regime.
Writing in First
Things February 6, John DiIulio, the Philadelphia Democrat who first
headed the Bush office of faith-based initiatives, thought it would be
sooner rather than later:
“After the first 100
days or so, Obama and his council will not be able to vote ‘present’ on
faith-based initiatives. Nor, as they seemed to do recently on abortion,
should they expect those who are to their slight right (like some Catholic
Democratic leaders) or to their far right (like many Republican evangelical
Christian leaders) on issues like religious hiring rights to stay quiet or
be satisfied with broad or bipartisan consultations that nonetheless are
followed by one-sided policies.”
But just before the
100-day mark, Michelle Boorstein reported on the Washington Post’s
“God in Government” blog that the Obama team still seemed determined to vote
“present” on the hiring issue. The issue, wrote Boorstein, “is proving so
explosive that White House officials have removed it from the to-do list of
a task force that’s supposed to sift through church-state issues.”
The task force, one of
six organized under Obama’s advisory council, will instead confine its
efforts to things like simplifying the process for faith-based groups to
form separate nonprofits. The lawyers in the White House and Attorney
General’s office will ostensibly be left to their own devices to sort
through the hiring cases.
In an April 24
commentary at Christianity Today’s politics blog, Calvin College
political scientist Doug Koopman made a persuasive prediction about how
things will likely unfold from here:
“The case-by-case
decision process gives either a partial and somewhat surprising victory for
the hiring rights side, or, more likely, a series of small, quiet, but
cumulative losses. Both a majority of the advisory committee (and almost
certainly nearly all the political hires at Justice and in the White House
involved in the matter) appear to be on the other side, against ‘hiring
discrimination’ as that side describes it. The case-by-case approach is
probably a way to build a set of precedents limiting hiring rights
step-by-step, and then in a few years decide that the ‘case law’ that
they’ve created pretty much takes away most hiring rights.”
The only error
in the above analysis is the word “quiet.” Expect plenty of noise from all
sides, case by case.
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