Imperial Valley Press

Trump steadily fulfills goals on religious right wish list

-

NEW YORK (AP) — When Donald Trump assumed the presidency, conservati­ve religious leaders drew up “wish lists’ of steps they hoped he’d take to oppose abortion and rein in the LGBTQ-rights movement. With a flurry of recent actions, Trump’s administra­tion is now winning their praise for aggressive­ly fulfilling many of their goals.

Mat Staver, president of the legal advocacy organizati­on Liberty Counsel, said Trump has fulfilled about 90% of the goals on a list that Staver and other conservati­ve leaders compiled.

“In the first two years of his administra­tion, he’s achieved more than all of the presidents combined since Ronald Reagan,” Staver said. “He’s been the most pro-religious freedom and pro-life president in modern history.”

One of the most dramatic steps — hailed by conservati­ves and decried by liberals — came this week when the Department of Health and Human Services implemente­d a new rule for the federal family planning program known as Title X. Planned Parenthood, long a target of religious conservati­ves because of its role as the leading U.S. abortion provider, quit the program — walking away from tens of millions of dollars in grants — rather than comply with a new rule prohibitin­g clinics from referring women for abortions.

Last week, the Labor Department proposed a rule that is expected to shield federal contractor­s from discrimina­tion complaints regarding hiring and firing decisions motivated by religious beliefs. Critics say the rule, if implemente­d, would enable employers to discrimina­te against LGBTQ people.

On Friday, the Justice Department filed a brief telling the Supreme Court that federal law allows firing workers for being transgende­r. The brief is related to three cases that the high court will hear in its upcoming term related to LGBTQ discrimina­tion in the workplace.

Earlier this year, Health and Human Services issued a waiver allowing a state-contracted foster care agency in South Carolina to deny services to same-sex and non-Christian families. HHS also moved to revoke newly won health care discrimina­tion protection­s for transgende­r people.

These and other actions aimed at curtailing abortion rights and LGBTQ rights have helped many conservati­ve Christians overlook other aspects of Trump’s presidency, such as his often-divisive rhetoric on Twitter and at rallies.

The Rev. Robert Jeffress, pastor of the Southern Baptist megachurch First Baptist Dallas and a frequent guest at the White House, predicted that Trump would win more evangelica­l votes in 2020 than he did in 2016, when they helped provide his margin of victory.

“When he ran in 2016 and promised pro-life, pro-religious freedom policies, most evangelica­ls who voted for him didn’t know whether he would or could fulfill those promises,” Jeffress said. “When they look back now, they see he checked off all of those goals . ... He’ll win by an even larger margin on basis of promises kept.”

The same phenomenon being celebrated by religious conservati­ves is viewed with alarm by liberal activists.

For the religious right, “Every day is Christmas,” said Rachel Laser, president & CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. She worries that the mantra of “religious freedom” is being used to protect some Americans while hurting others.

“It can’t be religious freedom just for white evangelica­l Christians — it has to be religious freedom for all of us,” she said. “We’re witnessing divisivene­ss as Trump and his cronies and religious extremists across the country continue to chip away at church-state separation.”

The American Civil Liberties Union is among several organizati­ons seeking to block some of the administra­tion’s moves in court.

“This is essentiall­y the wish list of groups that have a very extreme and discrimina­tory perspectiv­e on what religious liberty means,” said Ian Thompson, the ACLU’s senior legislativ­e representa­tive in Washington.

“It’s important not to see any one of these policies in isolation but to see them as part of a coordinate­d effort by the administra­tion across agencies,” Thompson said.

He urged the Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives to go on record against the policies, and investigat­e those which seem particular­ly problemati­c.

 ??  ?? In this Jan. 22 file photo, people taking part in an anti-abortion march hold signs as they stand on the steps of the Legislativ­e building at the Capitol in Olympia, Wash. AP Photo/ted S. WArren
In this Jan. 22 file photo, people taking part in an anti-abortion march hold signs as they stand on the steps of the Legislativ­e building at the Capitol in Olympia, Wash. AP Photo/ted S. WArren

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States