Pledges, promises and paybacks
When a candidate proposes that if elected he or she will promise to
do something, once in office, that candidate should follow through on
those promises. The relationship of a candidate and voter is much
like an agreement, a verbal contract. The candidate promises action
on issues, only if the voter elects him.
For the most part, candidates should follow through on their
words, but in this case, the president should be held more
accountable on delivering his promises because he had already
experienced four years of the presidency, and knows what is possible
and what is not. There is no reason why religious groups should be
excluded from expecting anything from the government because they are
part of the public. The fundamental principle of our system is built
by the people, for the people.
IMAM SAYED MOUSTAFA
AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
I remember the comment of George Stephanopoulos: “The president
has kept all of the promises he intended to keep.” Every presidential
administration provides a dismal record of broken commitments as the
difference between rhetoric and policy is manifested.
In a 2000 debate with Vice President Gore, candidate Bush said:
“I’m not so sure the role of the United States is to go around the
world and say, ‘This is the way it’s got to be.’” In fact, one of
George Bush’s most popular lines in his stump speech during the 2000
campaign was: “I’m worried about an opponent who uses nation building
and the military in the same sentence. See, our view of the military
is for our military to be properly prepared to fight and win war and,
therefore, prevent war from happening in the first place.”
Regardless of one’s view of the war in Iraq, America is engaged in
the most massive project of nation building since the Marshall Plan a
half-century ago. The president ran on a platform that appealed to
his conservative base, one that promised not to “overextend” the
military, which he accused Bill Clinton of doing, and not to engage
in nation building. He abandoned this platform within months of
taking office, and we are far from the “humble foreign policy” he
advocated four years ago.
Betrayed constituencies litter the political landscape. Any group,
religious or secular, that contributed money and manpower to a
candidate, has the right to expect fulfillment of promises made to
it. Certainly a man like President Bush, for whom religious faith is
at the core of his being, will try to respond favorably to a
religious agenda -- or at least appear to do so. The reality is that,
like his promise about abstaining from nation building, no political
promise is legally or morally binding. Candidates know this as they
speak, and voters know this as they listen.
Remember candidate George H.W. Bush’s 1988 promise: “Read my lips,
no new taxes.” This vow was made shortly before he became president,
betrayed his base and raised taxes. The current President Bush’s
religious base should know, better than most, that only God keeps all
of His promises.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
Religious groups should insist on commitment, responsibility,
accountability and faithfulness, not “payback.” “Payback” may be good
politics, but it is not good religion. Good religion is covenantal
not contractual.
Members of faith communities, like everyone else, regularly enter
into contracts. We dispute written contracts in courts of law and how
oral contracts are binding just about everywhere. In the “total
complex of relations among people in society,” literally “politikos,”
it is fair to expect “quid pro quo,” something given or received for
something else: “You give me that, and I’ll give you this.” Contracts
require mutual understanding and agreement from those involved.
Politics is “the art of the possible,” so how can those elected do
everything they want to do themselves, much less be committed to
doing everything that those who voted for them want when our agendas
are so diverse? And, how can we expect to receive what we most desire
from government?
Faith witnesses that “God gives us everything! We are to give all
to serving God and others.” “All” means all we are and all we have
been given, not only this or that. At marriage celebrations, partners
commit “all that I am and all that I have,” not some of whom I am and
a portion of what I have. Those of us who take Holy Scripture
seriously proclaim the great first covenant summarized, for example,
in Leviticus 26:12, “I shall be your God and you shall be my people.”
Christians have an equally essential second covenant summed up by
Jesus, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood.” (1 Corinthians
11:25) We must understand that an integral part of both covenants is
“you can’t always get what you want, but ... you get what you need,”
which last June in this space, Rabbi Miller rightly called “the
immortal Rolling Stones’ song.”
A covenant is a living, dynamic, beneficial relationship beyond
“payback.” Politicians and their constituents would do well to take
this ideal to heart.
(THE VERY REV’D CANON)
PETER D. HAYNES
Saint Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
There is a difference between keeping your promises and being
obligated to help someone just because they helped you. If any group
is pressing the president for favors because of favors they did for
him, the only word for that in my mind is bribery. If, however,
people supported the president and voted for him based on issues he
promised to address prior to the election, then great -- our
government works. We are a representative government and people voted
for the president based on issues he addressed as relevant. It is
then up to him to keep his promises, or he becomes just another
politician and not the man of integrity many believe him to be.
The whole question is divisive in the first place. It represents
the views of those opposed to the president’s agenda who are trying
to get popular support for the theory that he is being blackmailed.
Since they lost the election, now they are trying to undermine the
platform the election was based on. This too, is part of the way our
government works. As ugly and divisive as it seems, at least they
have the right to object.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
A Zen Buddhist might say, “Senator, in our tradition, a woman’s
choice to have an abortion may be considered a moral one, and I
believe abortion should remain legal.” The fundamentalist Christian
is entitled to say, “I think abortion is always immoral. I want you
to take steps toward making it illegal, and I will not vote for you
if you do not.”
“Separation of church and state” does not mean that input from
individuals and groups who are guided by their religious traditions
will be excluded from the decision-making process in a democracy.
Rather, it protects us from those fundamentalists (who are found
globally and within all religious traditions) who would like to have
their religious views forced on everyone. Fundamentalists -- whose
extreme views go beyond traditionalism, conservatism or orthodoxy --
often think separation of church and state means that society is
against religion, and they do not appreciate that its purpose is to
ensure that all religions are respected in a diverse nation.
Competing claims must be weighed by those who have been elected with
a view to the Constitutional rights and welfare of all in a
pluralistic society.
President Bush did not win by a landslide in this most recent
election, and Al Gore won the last. It does not take many
conversations with friends, family and co-workers to figure out that
the country is truly divided on critical issues -- the war in Iraq,
the threat to social security, problems with our education and health
care systems, the disgrace of poverty, as well as differing views
about abortion and homosexuality. It is significant that 22% of
voters in the 2004 election claimed their vote was based on “moral
values,” which they interpreted as opposition to abortion and
homosexuality. It is hard to fathom how so many people can believe
that “morality” refers to what people do in bed, while war,
globalization, world trade, poverty and the nuclear threat are not
viewed as moral or religious issues, or are given little importance
in deciding who to vote for.
Rosemary Ruether, writing in the National Catholic Reporter, noted
that many Americans also voted against their own economic interests
-- jobs, the dangers of shrinking social services, the threat of
privatized social security, tax breaks for the rich -- because they
were “emotionally stirred” by the sexual issues.
I worked for one year in Washington, D.C., on a lobbying project
sponsored by groups such as the Religious Coalition for Abortion
Rights, Catholics for a Free Choice, Planned Parenthood and the
American Civil Liberties Union to pass legislation which would
provide for funding for abortion for victims of rape or incest under
the Medicaid program (which provides federal health care funding for
women living in poverty). In other words, poor women depending upon
public assistance for health care could not have an abortion, even if
the pregnancy was the result of rape or incest. This work
demonstrated to me the value of religious as well as nonreligious
groups working to influence public policy.
At our Zen Center, we do not take a Zen Center, Zen Buddhist or
group position on political issues. We do have formal talks, readings
and discussions about current issues and the ways in which Zen
Buddhist practice relates. We believe that each person is best guided
by awareness meditation practice to discern his or her viewpoints and
actions.
The conservative and/or Christian groups certainly will pressure
President Bush and Congress to pursue their agenda. The rest of us
will have to work hard to resist these threats.
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
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