Apparently Chistian fundamentalism = good, Muslim fundamentalism = bad?

Dana

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/11/04/politics/main653667.shtml

CBS/AP) The Democratic Party's sharp defeat in the 2004 election has
already produced a round of soul searching.

The GOP recaptured the White House and strengthened its hold on
Congress with powerful support from churchgoers.

Now some in the party are saying that the Democrats need to reach out
to these voters with a faith-based appeal.

"I don't hesitate to stand up in a crowd and express how important
faith is in my life. It is important to be able to express that in a
way that is believable, and Democrats have to get comfortable doing
that," Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., told the Washington Post.

Other Democratic politicians and officials echoed her view. 

Congressman Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., a former presidential candidate,
told the New York Times that Democrats had failed "to speak to our
faith, and to relate to people that we share their faith."

President Bush's faith-based appeal resonated in the South and rural
and small town communities across the nation. And his opposition to
gay marriage positioned him to take advantage of widespread voter
opposition to same-sex unions.

According to CBS News exit polls, only 26 percent of all voters
supported the idea of legalized gay and lesbian marriages, while 36
percent opposed any legal recognition of gay and lesbian
relationships. Among this latter group, Mr. Bush held a greater than
2-to-1 advantage over Democrat John Kerry.

No section of the nation received Mr. Bush's values-laden message more
enthusiastically than the Old Confederacy. The election virtually
completed the ongoing transformation of the South from a Democratic
bastion to a GOP stronghold. Five Southern Senate seats previously
held by Democrats fell to the Republicans.

The Republican South has created some formidable election math for the
Democrats. With the South in the pocket of the 2008 Republican
presidential candidate, the 2008 Democratic nominee will need about 70
percent of electoral votes available in the rest of the country to win
the White House.

Some observers believe GOP triumphs in the South have created the
conditions under which the Republicans can remain as the nation's
majority party for many years.

"The only reason the Democrats dominated [Congress] for as many
decades as they did is their advantage came from the South," GOP
pollster Whit Ayres told the Los Angeles Times. "When the South
essentially left the Democratic coalition, that's when we had the
national shift [in Congress] to the Republicans."

So the Democratic Party now turns to an internal debate about its
future direction.

"We Democrats better think long and hard about what happened ... and
how our party is going to connect with the hopes and aspirations of
the people," Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., after watching Senate
Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., an 18-year Senate veteran, go
down in defeat. "We have lost the ability to connect with people's
value systems and we're going to have to work to get that back."


�MMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The
Associated Press contributed to this report.


-- 
Diebold: It's a better way to deliver a state

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