Anonymous ID: 1b1c01 May 31, 2019, 1:36 p.m. No.6638828   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9227 >>9249

Joe Biden has God on his side (WaPo)

By Rob Stutzman

May 31 at 3:42 PM

http://archive.is/AjOzC

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/joe-biden-has-god-on-his-side/2019/05/31/c8bd70f4-822e-11e9-bce7-40b4105f7ca0_story.html?noredirect=on

Rob Stutzman is a Republican political consultant in Sacramento.

Joe Biden has run for president twice before, but this time around, he may have God on his side.

That’s not a Pat Robertson-like prediction about a God who is going to intervene on Biden’s behalf at the ballot box. Instead, I’m talking about a voter synapse that Biden is well positioned to fire like few Democrats have since Jimmy Carter carried the Sunday school vote in 1976. And it works for him in the primaries and the general.

It’s well established from data, most importantly exit polling, that white evangelicals are the core of President Trump’s base. However, pollsters determine this trait by asking voters to self-select, usually presenting an option of “evangelical and/or born again.” Most polls don’t probe beyond that; they don’t ask a religious identity question, or even test for regular church attendance. Many Americans who are religious don’t care for the “born-again” or “evangelical” terms. The result? Polls often underreport the spirituality of the U.S. electorate.

The Pew Research Center reported last fall that 20 percent of Americans say religion is the most meaningful part of their lives. This fifth of the nation is not all aging, white Trump voters. It includes Catholics, evangelicals of color, members of the historically black Protestant tradition, and others. Some of these categories overlap. But here’s the opportunity in our fractured country: People of faith want to connect with other people of faith. Biden can make that connection. He may already be doing that.

In presidential politics, as a rule, faith benefits candidates when they can talk about it in a personal way, usually in terms of their spiritual journey. George W. Bush was able to explain how Jesus Christ changed his life. He stopped drinking, became a better husband and generally got his life together. That story resonated with voters of faith because it was similar to their own experience or that of someone they knew. It was Carter who premiered this move, telling voters in the North Carolina Democratic primary in 1976 that he had been born again after a period of repeated setbacks. It was a way of saying to strangers, “I’m a lot like you.”

Biden, a Roman Catholic, speaks genuinely about how his faith has been a sustaining aspect of his life through family tragedies, including the loss of his son, Beau, to brain cancer. He wears Beau’s rosary around his wrist, describing it as the connection he keeps daily with his late son. He quotes Soren Kierkegaard — “Faith sees best in the dark ” — to explain how he and his wife’s shared belief in God connects him with tens of millions of Americans who rely on a sustaining faith amid myriad challenges.

Most of the recent analysis of Biden’s early advantage with African American voters attributes his support to high name identification and his role as President Barack Obama’s vice president. There is uncertainty about whether this support is durable. But faith could be Biden’s enduring connection to those voters. His personal loss and his faithful witness to it might be cynically dismissed by secular voters as a stunt; it is not dismissed by people of faith. He has been to black churches all over the country, and if he is able to replicate, as he told Matt Malone in a 2015 interview that “Jesus Christ is the example of what we are supposed to do,” he will hear a chorus of “Amens!” in response. For other contenders it might come off as a box to check. For Biden it comes from the heart.

Which brings us to Trump. The fact that the president is sustained by a devout base of conservative Christians is an irony that would have tested Shakespeare. Although preachers such as Franklin Graham and Jerry Falwell Jr. claim that Trump is a Christian, he exhibits little of the humility and wonder that often mark being “born again.” Trump’s connection to evangelicals is purely a transactional one; instead of taking the time to mix with his base, he appeals to it by warning evangelicals, as he did before the midterms, that “ you’re one election away from losing everything you’ve got.” As if Christ would depart their souls if the Democrats won.

What happens to Christian voters when they see a Democratic candidate living an authentic faith juxtaposed with a Republican president just renting some religion? My guess is that many will think twice. Some may stick with their candidate. But some may decide that their relationship with Trump is a worldly transaction that strains any New Testament passage. It’s a challenge that I’d assert reaches beyond the altar of polling data for an answer.

Anonymous ID: 1b1c01 May 31, 2019, 1:50 p.m. No.6638938   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8983

Former U.S. president Barack Obama gives speech in Ottawa tonight

https://www.citynews1130.com/2019/05/31/former-u-s-president-barack-obama-gives-speech-in-ottawa-tonight/

http://archive.is/Il12X

Posted May 31, 2019 1:08 pm PDT

OTTAWA — Former U.S. president Barack Obama is set to give a speech and answer questions at an event in Canada’s capital later tonight.

 

The event, hosted by the think-tank Canada 2020, will be at Ottawa’s Canadian Tire Centre, and comes one day after U.S. Vice-President Mike Pence was in town on behalf of President Donald Trump, who is decidedly less popular in Canada than the 44th occupant of the Oval Office.

 

While still in office in 2016, Obama addressed Canada’s Parliament and received a standing ovation and cheers in the House of Commons. Obama also visited Canada in the winter of 2009 shortly after taking office.

 

Trump has yet to pay a solo visit to Ottawa but his appearance as part of the larger G7 leaders’ summit in Quebec last year plunged Canada-U.S. relations to a new low.

 

Tweeting from Air Force One after departing Canada, Trump called Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “very dishonest and weak.”

 

On Thursday, Pence was in Ottawa to give momentum to the new North American trade deal, and brought warm greetings from Trump. He said the Canada-U.S. relationship has never been stronger and that was due in part to Trudeau’s leadership.

 

Canada 2020 chairman Tom Pitfield has called Obama is a “generation-defining political leader” and an inspiration to millions of people around the world.

 

Since Obama’s presidency ended in January 2017, he’s become a big name on the paid speaking circuit, and appeared at a similar event in Calgary in March. Tickets for today’s event started at $75.

Anonymous ID: 1b1c01 May 31, 2019, 2:05 p.m. No.6639020   🗄️.is 🔗kun

God, please make plain the deeds

of the wolves in sheep's clothing,

and open the eyes of those still asleep.

So that mankind may be united

in peace, love, and prosperity,

and we may glorify Your Name forever.

We pray this in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.

Amen.