Thursday, June 01, 2006

American theocracy

Is God ambidextrous?

YOU cannot get more brazen than holding a political rally in a church. Last week, more than 1,000 religious activists gathered in a splendid old one in Washington, DC, to talk politics. They discussed their spiritual agenda for America, swapped stories about power struggles within their party and travelled to Capitol Hill to lobby congressmen.


The religious left is more energised than it has been for years. The number of new-wave “values voters”—who loathe, rather than love, the values embraced by George Bush—is growing rapidly. They range from blacks and Latinos (who are among the most churchgoing people in the country) to left-wing evangelicals to a hotch-potch of Buddhists and gurus, and they are coming together to make their voices heard. The religious left has acquired spokesmen in the form of Jim Wallis, the author of “God's Politics”, and Michael Lerner, a rabbi and the organiser of last week's conference. Several topical themes are giving it momentum, from immigration reform, where the Catholic church has been particularly outspoken, to Iraq.

More

Colombian Presidential Elections

Colombia shows South Americans how to vote
There is nothing inevitable about South America's plunge into Leftist militancy. We are not witnessing an inexorable, tectonic shift.

Colombians have just made history by giving a single presidential candidate a plurality of the vote, thus avoiding, for the first time since the foundation of the republic, a second-round election.

More

Colombia halts Latin America's march to the Left
Colombians granted their Right-wing president a second four years in office yesterday, backing his assaults on the booming drugs trade...Alvaro Uribe, Washington's staunchest ally in Latin America, changed the constitution last year to allow himself to seek re-election and becomes the first Colombian president to win a second term for more than a century.

More in The Daily Telegraph