Terry Mattingly: Tracking religion on the campaign trail

It wasn’t easy being the token evangelical in the Howard Dean office during the 2004 White House race.

Other staffers called Mara Vanderslice the “church lady” and reminded her that the loudest cheers at Dean rallies followed attacks on the Religious Right. But what really stung were her candidate’s answers to religious questions.

Round one: Dean confessed that he left the Episcopal Church when his parish blocked the construction of a bike path. Round two: He names the Book of Job as his favorite New Testament book. Round three: Asked about his plans to woo religious believers, Dean said he was waiting until the campaign hit the Deep South.

Ouch. That was business as usual until the “values voters” carried President George W. Bush back into office, said author Dan Gilgoff, who dissected the trials of Vanderslice in “The Jesus Machine,” his book on James Dobson and the Christian right. That election shook the Democrats and helped them realize that they needed some candidates who were not afraid of faith.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Religion & Culture, US Presidential Election 2008

2 comments on “Terry Mattingly: Tracking religion on the campaign trail

  1. Bill C says:

    I understood that MaraVanderslice was also the priestess of the Howard Dean campaign.

  2. The_Archer_of_the_Forest says:

    I, for one, have always firmly believed that salvation cometh not from politicians.