Does the Religious Left Deserve More Ink in Healthcare Fight?

September 15, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Dan Gilgoff, God & Country

Street Prophets boss/religious-left agitator Dan Schultz has a piece up on Religion Dispatches slamming religious progressives for raising concerns over abortion in the Democratic healthcare reform proposals, a story I broke here last week. They're playing right into the Christian right's hands, Schultz alleges, threatening to stop reform in its tracks. Schultz also has words for yours truly:

Posts like this raise many questions. Namely: How many times will the Religious-Industrial Complex go to the same well? And: how many times will US News & World Report blogger Dan Gilgoff dutifully write up the latest iteration of this same threadbare press release for them without bothering to evaluate its premises?

...Given that opinion is split on the priority given to the abortion issue even with the religious progressive coalition, why is it that Dan Gilgoff is reporting this story as if all the liberals were upset? It's not like he hasn't spoken to religious pro-choice advocates, myself among many others. He knows where to find us.

My defense: First, I didn't report that all religious liberals were upset. To wit:

Progressive faith leaders and organizations are pushing hard for healthcare reform along the lines that President Obama has articulated, but some of the most prominent have grown concerned with the House healthcare bill's provisions for abortion coverage in the public health insurance plan [italics added for emphasis].

Why didn't I include the voices of pro-abortion rights religious groups in the piece? Simple: I haven't seen evidence that they're influencing the national conversation on healthcare reform, let alone having an effect on the policymakers driving the process.

The religious progressives that precipitated my story last week have shown that type of influence. Catholics United and Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good, which I cite in my piece, are in contact with the White House and, to a lesser extent, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. They're helping to influence the policymaking process and the national conversation on abortion in healthcare reform.

Stephen Schneck, a left-leaning Catholic scholar whose abortion concerns made it into my piece, has advised the White House on Catholic issues, including around President Obama's recent meeting with Pope Benedict XVI.

Faith in Public Life, another progressive group that has privately expressed concern about abortion in healthcare, has also demonstrated influence. It organized a recent conference call on healthcare that featured none other than the president himself. (None of these groups or figures sent out press releases about their abortion-in-healthcare concerns, as Schultz claims. I got the story by talking to sources.)

The hard-core religious left hasn't shown the kind of influence, in Washington or out in the country, demonstrated by the more moderate religious progressives who provoked my piece on abortion in healthcare. I know where to find proud religious leftists, as Schultz says. But that doesn't mean they deserve ink.

Tags:
abortion,
healthcare reform,
religion,
healthcare

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all good things

Globals of OK 7:35AM October 03, 2009

Annenberg Foundations FactCheck.org says "Despite what Obama said, the House bill would allow abortions to be covered by a federal plan and by federally subsidized private plans."

Check for yourself:

http://www.factcheck.org/2009/08/abortion-which-side-is-fabricating/

Annenberg Foundation is a nonpartisan group sharing the Truth.

In a court of law that would be purgery

Seek, Speak, Share, and Defend the Truth.

ComPassion of IN 5:13PM September 19, 2009

The choice to slaughter human life is wrong. Abortion and stopping a life is not a solution.

Adoption is a solution.

Love education is a solution.

Care for every person is a solution.

Abortion is not health care.

Every person in America should be allowed to have heath care.

Health care should care for life from conception to natural death.

Almost every person has talents that they can share and payback to the good of our people and nation.

I have a cousin and he is a quadraplegic and he is my inspiration that everyone can contribute to the good of our nation. He gives back with his mind and through love for others.

Let's move away from the extreme political sides and focus on how we can care for people before things. Let's stop the straight ticket political voting and encourage the politicians to change the parties for the people.

People are more important than money, wants, personal choice, and material things.

A personal right or choice should not end someones life. Big business or big government should not come before the people. Big business and Big government should serve the people. Let's encourage and reward politicians that give and care for the people.

Love Life First

Love People Over Things

Love People Over Wants

Love People Over Money

Help the people to Love

Help the people to Respect

Help the people up (hand up)

Help the people to give back

Government and Business for the people

Love the People

ComPassion of IN 10:49AM September 19, 2009

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Dan Gilgoff covers religion for U.S. News & World Report. He is the author of The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family, and Evangelical America are Winning the Culture War, and is a former politics editor at beliefnet. E-mail Dan at godandcountry@usnews.com.

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