The Social Gospel Lays an Egg in Alabama
by Lisa San Pascual
In recent years, Alabama has produced far more than its share of
controversies over religion and politics. But when newly elected Gov. Bob
Riley—a stalwart low-tax Republican and standard-bearer for the religious
right—took a page from the liberal Protestant playbook and announced that
the Christian way to solve Alabama’s huge budget deficit was to raise
taxes—Alabamians and journalists all over the country were amazed.
On May 19, Riley launched a campaign to persuade the state’s voters that
they should endorse a $1.2 billon tax increase—the largest in the state’s
history—in order to transform a tax structure that he had decided was unjust
to the poor. “Jesus says one of our missions is to take care of the least
among us,” he told the Birmingham News after announcing his plan.
While that biblical message was familiar to legions of Alabama voters,
Riley’s application of it was not.
And on September 9, Alabama voters responded by
decisively squelching Riley’s proposal by a 2-1 margin. The real conundrum
for journalists, however, was why Riley, a decided conservative, would
attempt such a startling ideological leap. Perhaps it was the daunting
responsibility of closing a gaping $675- million budget deficit—the deepest
since the Depression—that forced pragmatism to prevail over piety.
But what puzzled journalists, and many of those
who on both sides of the referendum, was the sudden reversal in tax policy
that followed Riley’s move from Congress to the governor’s mansion. As a
member of the U.S. House of Representatives, Riley voted like the
conventional conservative Republican and fundamentalist Southern Baptist he
still claims to be. But his tax plan as governor looked more like the work
of a Social Gospel type. On the campaign trail, he attributed his conversion
to progressive taxation to a book, The Least of These: Fair Taxes and the
Moral Duty of Christians, published in January 2003 by Susan Pace Hamill,
a University of Alabama law professor.
Hamill, a Methodist with a Social Gospel
reading of Christian social ethics, condemned Alabama’s regressive tax
structure, pointing out that Alabama’s poorest residents pay almost 11
percent of their income in state taxes, while the wealthiest pay less than
four percent.
Riley seconded Hamill’s notion that helping the
poor is a Christian mandate. “According to our Christian ethics,” he told
the August 22 Talon News, “we’re supposed to love God, love each
other, and help take care of the poor. It is immoral to charge somebody
making $5,000 an income tax.”
But many in Alabama saw this as a startling
flip-flop. “Up is down, down is up, and Gov. Bob Riley, who as a congressman
bragged he had never voted for a tax increase, has proposed the largest one
by far in Alabama history,” wrote Birmingham News columnist Bob
Blalock on June 13, at the beginning of Riley’s campaign.
Other commentators were amazed that Riley was
cutting left—straight across the sentiments of his conservative base—by
turning to the Bible’s very frequent passages on the moral imperative of
assisting the needy. As the summer progressed, Riley’s effort to synthesize
compassionate conservatism and redistributionist liberalism puzzled almost
everyone, with the religious right finding the plan too progressive and the
left finding it too laden with religious rhetoric.
“Riley’s stature as a conservative, anti-tax
Republican was expected to help sell the package,” Washington Post
reporter Dale Russakoff wrote in a post-referendum wrap-up on September 10,
“but he ended up largely isolated politically. His own state party came out
against his proposal while the plan’s natural constituency of
Democrats—particularly black Democrats—kept their distance.”
Nevertheless, a lot of Alabama journalists
liked the looks of Riley’s unlikely fusion. “What Riley, a long-proven
conservative, seeks with his tax plan is nothing less than a conservative
renewal of Alabama’s civic order,” wrote Mobile Register columnist
Quinn Hillyer on August 19, “one that improves both the state’s
law-enforcement capabilities and its system of education.”
The most interesting aspect of the campaign is
that Riley’s proposal split the national and Alabama organizations of the
Christian Coalition. In May, the Christian Coalition of Alabama (CCA)
declared its opposition. The CCA blamed the state’s fiscal difficulties on
“years of poor stewardship and fiscal irresponsibility” instead of moral
negligence, Jeff Gannon reported in the Talon News on August 22.
“Alabama does not have a tax crisis. It has a
spending crisis,” the CCA thundered in an eight-page “voter education
publication” distributed the weekend preceding the vote in churches,
Christian schools, bookstores, and at football games. “The road to a better
future isn’t paved with a tax increase.”
Surprisingly, the national Christian Coalition
took the Riley exegesis seriously. Calling the tax plan “visionary and
courageous,” its president, Roberta Combs, wrote in an Anniston Star
op-ed August 10, “I think this is a good plan and I think people of faith
need to know about the plan.”
Combs’ comments infuriated the CCA. “I have
known Roberta Combs for over 10 years and the position outlined today is
inconsistent with the national Christian Coalition’s long-standing platform
related to the burden of taxes on the families,” CCA Chairman Emeritus Bob
Russell told an interviewer on the NBC13.com website.
The friction between the state and national
chapters agitated Riley, too. “One of the things that’s bothered me all the
way through this is why did the local chapter come out and not support
this,” he said.
Alabama columnists, who largely supported
Riley’s plan, were bemused by the controversy it sparked among religious
conservatives. “When conservatives such as the governor are willing to do
the right thing, politics be damned, then we moderate-to-liberal types have
got to be big enough to recognize their efforts,” wrote Huntsville Times
columnist David Person on August 8. “Bravo to the Christian Coalition of
America for being honest and brave. And shame on the Alabama Christian
Coalition for putting politics above progress.”
Newspapers also doubted the sincerity of the
CCA. “The state Christian Coalition, funded in part (some say substantially)
by the rich landowners of the Alabama Farmers Federation, will have given
false religious cover for an opposition born of selfishness and cynicism,”
Quinn Hillyer of the Mobile Register charged on August 20.
Mainline Protestant organizations supported
Riley’s plan. Among these were the Alabama-West Florida Conference of the
United Methodist Church, two regional jurisdictions of the Presbyterian
Church (USA), the Alabama diocese of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion of
Alabama, and the Episcopal Diocese of Alabama.
However, the folk Riley failed most
spectacularly to convert were conservative Protestant pastors, especially
independents. “Sure, most of the big denominations have endorsed tax
reform,” wrote Birmingham News columnist Robin DeMonia on August 8.
But a number of Christian opponents complained
when Riley asked pastors to trumpet the plan from their pulpits. (“What
about separation of church and state?” they asked.) They also argued Riley’s
camps were perverting Judeo-Christian principles, and that his supporters
were using guilt to twist voters’ arms. “Contrary to what these imply,” one
Calera minister wrote this week, “Jesus will love you even if you vote
against Riley’s tax plan.”
Many were interested to see what would happen
when Alabama’s avid church-goers had to choose between piety and pocketbook.
“The problem is, first, Christians vote their pocketbooks, too,” David
Lanoue, chairman of the political science department at the University of
Alabama, told USA Today on September 10. “And second, a lot of
Christians would argue that the responsibility for the poor should be
directed toward churches and faith-based institutions and not toward higher
taxes.”
In the end, Riley’s daring crusade to persuade
Alabamians that Jesus wanted them to raise taxes proved far too novel and
far too unpalatable for most Alabama voters. As the Rev. T.H. “Buzz”
Barrett, pastor of the Pleasant Grove United Methodist Church, told the
Mobile Register, “You could preach either for it or against it from the
Bible, but you have to be careful not to wrap any flag around the cross,
because that’s not where it belongs.”
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