McCain advisor rips the religious right, calls movement a ‘serious problem’

John McCain’s relationship with the religious right has been, shall we say, a little awkward since he denounced the movement’s top leaders as “agents of intolerance” eight years ago. I have a hunch the tensions are about to get a little bit worse.

Yesterday, representatives of the Clinton, Obama and McCain campaigns spoke before the United Jewish Communities in DC, and McCain sent campaign advisor Lawrence Eagleburger, deputy secretary of State under Bush I, to speak on his behalf.

Thankfully, Eagleburger went off-script when asked about McCain’s relationship with the religious right, a movement United Jewish Communities members are less than fond of.

“On the Christian hard right, I live in Charlottesville now and I can’t tell you I’m surrounded by it,” Eagleburger said. “I must tell you we fought it there, fought hard against it. There’s no question that in the Republican Party it is a serious problem…Among the hard-right conservatives in the Republican Party John McCain was, shall we say, less than enthusiastically received…What you see is what you get. You are not going to see him moving to assuage the concerns of these conservatives.

“The issues that have concerned the far right I don’t see and I don’t expect to see any changes. I know there will be some people in his entourage who will want to advocate for those changes, and again, I don’t believe he will shift on those fundamental issues.”

The WaPo posted a video of Eagleburger’s comments, along with some amusing snark from Dana Milbank.

So, Dobson & Company, are you going to take this lying down?

As it turns out, this is popping up at an especially difficult time for McCain and his relationship with the far-right religious activists that help make up his party’s base.

There’s a little whisper campaign out there among grassroots social conservatives who are concerned that John McCain may want to tamper a little with the language in the Republican Party platform when it comes to marriage. McCain denied it in an interview last Thursday with FOX News but the perception still exists.

McCain is AGAINST an amendment to the U.S. constitution defining marriage as between one man and one woman. He believes this is better left up to each state. Well, read the latest press release from the Family Research Council’s Senior Vice President Connie Mackey:

“Last Thursday night, Senator McCain tepidly endorsed the GOP’s platform concerning the protection of life and the preservation of marriage. His response to this question as well as his federalist position regarding the definition of marriage leads one to believe that his endorsement is not definitive. Senator McCain needs to clarify that the language concerning the social issues in the Republican Platform is safe and will not be tampered with.

“How could Senator McCain remain in the federalist camp on marriage when a U.S. District Court in Nebraska ruled that the Nebraska marriage amendment violated the U.S. Constitution? Regardless of that court being overruled by the 8th circuit, the fact remains that more than two dozen state amendments are just a few U.S. judges away from being declared unconstitutional. Senator McCain should recognize, as the U.S. Supreme Court did in the Boddie case, that states regulate marriage ‘absent some specific federal constitutional or statutory provision.’ When the reality of successful constitutional challenges threatens the family, the cornerstone of society, then the federal government needs to provide the foundation to guide the states.

This came before Eagleburger called groups like the Family Research Council a “serious problem.”

We’ll see just how angry they are today.

Eagleburger has always been a ham-fisted diplomat. Glad to see he is actively using his incompetence in his role as campaign stooge.

It looks like Larry just rendered all that Hagee and Parsley butt kissing for naught. Bless him for that.

  • Wow, it’s going to be a bad week for McCain.

    That’s the problem–it never is. He can conflate AQI with Iran (constantly) and dance back and forth with the fundies to his heart’s content, and the ‘liberal’ media will never raise and eyebrow much less point them out.

    Imagine if Obama or Clinton said what St. McCain did about AQI/Iran. The media would be all over it. But hey, he’s a ‘straight-shooter;’ a ‘maverick,’ dontcha know? And because of his service and his captivity, he is and will always get a pass.

  • Eagleburger will recant in 5…4…3…

    I remember when it came out in December of 1989 that Eagleburger had gone on a secret mission with Scowcroft to Bejing, to assure the Chinese that the American outrage over the Tianamen massacre was not going to get in the way of business. They toasted the Chinese leaders ”as friends to resume our important dialogue”, and meanwhile back in the US Bush was lying to us all, saying that there would be no “business as usual” with the Chinese. After the trip was revealed by CNN, they made up a BS story about why they went.

    In a statement today on the July visit, the White House said: ”General Scowcroft did undertake a mission to China for President Bush in July to personally underscore the U.S. shock and concern about the violence in Tiananmen Square and to impress upon the Chinese Government the seriousness with which this incident was viewed in the U.S. The President felt this face-to-face mission, like the one recently completed by General Scowcroft, was necessary to show the sense of purpose and direction of the U.S. Government.”

    But if the purpose of the trip was to criticize the Chinese action, it is unclear why the White House did not make it known at the time…

    http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE1D71439F93AA25751C1A96F948260

    It was obvious what was going on. The corporations had spoken, the Chinese were to be protected from the US public, because their profits were more important than the good name of the United States of America.

    That day I became a Democrat for life.

  • God spare us from another dumb president. I don’t know if I can handle another eight years of idiocy.

  • terraformer (4) And because of his service and his captivity, he is and will always get a pass.

    Right conclusion. Wrong reason. He didn’t always get a pass when Mitt and Giuliani were contenders. I would suspect corporate and tax policies have a lot more to do with it than his “service”.

  • Cutting off the Church’s tax free status is essential as long as they interfere with politics.

  • Speaking of Presidential envoys, did anyone notice that Cheney went to the Middle East supposedly to jawbone about the Israeli/Palestinian issues (to push peace for Bush’s legacy)? It turns out it was to pressure the UAE not to unpeg it’s oil currency from the US $. He managed to buy a repreive from them until the end of the year, when hopefully the Democratic President will take office and the $hit hits the fan…

  • Nice to see Always Hopeful has done the job of keeping our eye on the ball. The Religious Right baloney is a “shiny object.” The possibility of the Euro replacing the dollar has to do with whether or not we remain the country we are. If that changes on the day a Democrat takes office, things are going to go to hell fast, and the Traitors will be able to say that somehow it’s our fault.

  • We’ll see just how angry they are today.

    The bar is now open. The peanuts and popcorn are fresh, the beer is at precisely 34*F, and the grain alcohol is not watered down in the least.

  • My father, who swore religion and politics didn’t mix as far back as I can remember, also told me that the older I got, the smarter he’d get. Dad, you’re looking more brilliant every day.

  • You are not going to see him moving to assuage the concerns of these conservatives.
    –McCan’ts Mouthpiece

    So when he went to Liberty U. and Bob Jones University, and then sought out the support of Hagee, all of that was … what, exactly?

    Because it sure as hell seemed like “assuaging the concerns of those conservatives” to me.

    It’d be nice if some enterprising journalist called them on their bullsh!t, but I get the feeling that won’t happen …

  • I don’t believe he will shift on those fundamental issues.

    What’s he talking about? We know McCain will appoint the wingnuts’ judges for them. That’s what matters. This idea that McCain, who doesn’t really disagree with them on abortion or anything I’ve noticed, has carved out some set of principled stands is just his special brand of self-medication. Too bad it’s so popular and so enabled.

  • Note that Eagleburger is only opposed to the Theocratic wing of the Republican’t party because they oppose his candidate. He’s not saying here that the Theocratic wing out to be cast off, just ignored.

    He expects them to vote McCain in November.

  • Eagleburger is right, these hard-right Christianists are a problem for the Republican party. They are the reason I will not join and so remain an Independent. They are the reason the Republican party is so often off beam. They care little for small government, low taxes, fiscal and individual responsibility but rather focus on social issues in which they have no business meddeling. They were a problem for Barry Goldwater they are a problem now. It is time for the Republican party to be banished to the wilderness for a time and allow itself to be purged of these people.

  • Dittoes, BusterBunns. For too long the self-described social conservatives have been the tail trying to wag the dog. Certainly they are deserving of a place at the table… but it is not their table.

  • It would be a welcomed and necessary step for the GOP to distance themselves from the uber-religous right that wishes to legislatively dictate their own pious agenda.

    Bravo McCain, Bravo!

  • Please don’t get cocky. In a world where Pastor Wright will still be with us, I strongly suspect that the Christianists will be voting for McCain.

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