News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: White House Plays Down Haggard Ties |
Title: | US CO: White House Plays Down Haggard Ties |
Published On: | 2006-11-04 |
Source: | Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 22:58:49 |
WHITE HOUSE PLAYS DOWN HAGGARD TIES
Pastor Used To Be Briefed Weekly On Bush's Agenda
WASHINGTON - As president of the National Association of
Evangelicals, the Rev. Ted Haggard has advised the White House on
issues ranging from judicial appointments to steel tariffs.
But he also sought to widen the agenda of Christian evangelicals into
areas the Bush administration - and many of his Christian brethren -
would rather avoid.
Haggard resigned as president of the association, which says it
represents about 30 million evangelical church members, and took a
leave as senior pastor of the 14,000-member New Life Church in
Colorado Springs amid allegations that he paid a gay former escort
for sex and drugs.
Although he had been active in lobbying for conservative Christian
causes before, Haggard's profile rose after he became head of the NAE
early in 2003.
He made frequent visits to the White House and was included in a
select group of religious leaders briefed on the administration's
agenda during a weekly teleconference with White House staff, a
session meant to "feel the evangelical pulse," he's said.
"We have direct access (to the White House)," Haggard told a Wall
Street Journal reporter shortly before the last presidential
election, adding that he could take a concern to the president
through staff and get a response within 24 hours.
Asked Friday about the Haggard controversy, White House spokesman
Tony Fratto downplayed the pastor's connections to the Bush administration.
"He had been on a couple of (conference) calls but was not a weekly
participant in those calls," Fratto said, adding that Haggard had
been to the White House "one or two times."
"But there have been a lot of people who come to the White House," Fratto said.
Haggard keeps two framed photos of himself and President Bush on the
wall outside his church office but also has spoken admiringly in the
past of the faith of former Democratic presidents Bill Clinton and
Jimmy Carter.
Haggard was naturally on the "A" list of evangelical Christians
invited to the Bush White House for the signing of a bill banning
late-term abortions or to be called in advance of any announcement
for a chat about pending Supreme Court nominees.
Still, he criticized the White House for emphasizing the evangelical
faith of failed nominee Harriet Miers, rather than her judicial philosophy.
New Life Church sits near the United States Air Force Academy, and
Haggard has been at the forefront of evangelicals determined to stop
Pentagon regulations that might prevent military chaplains from evangelizing.
At the same time, Haggard has angered some religious conservatives
for urging Christians to protect Muslims in the days after the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks, and more recently for urging missionary
outreach to Muslims, but not to win converts or force Christianity on them.
Last summer, he joined an eclectic group of 27 religious leaders who
ruffled the White House with a statement published in newspaper
advertisements urging the government to "abolish torture now -
without exception" in dealings with prisoners, including those
suspected of terrorist activity.
In fact, Haggard has argued almost as frequently for freedom from
government intervention as he has freedom of religion. He was one of
the few religious conservatives to endorse a 2003 Supreme Court
decision striking down Texas' anti-sodomy law on privacy grounds.
In a 2004 interview with the Rocky Mountain News, Haggard told the
story of meeting with President Bush and a half-dozen other
evangelicals and using the occasion to argue against the extension of
steel tariffs.
"Your responsibility is the good of the people, and free trade is the
way we get cheaper steel," he recounted telling the president during
the session.
The taxes were dropped soon after the meeting.
Haggard's recent efforts promoted through the NAE a "broad biblical
agenda" that included improving health care, ending racism and
addressing global warming, which he recently declared should be an
evangelical priority.
Like the White House, however, Haggard seeks to find environmental
solutions through a free-market approach rather than through tight
government controls or taxes on emissions of greenhouse gases.
Although the association's board approved some broad goals for social
activism earlier this year, many Christian conservatives have
criticized the move for going beyond the "values" issues that have
traditionally been the political focus of the community.
Pastor Used To Be Briefed Weekly On Bush's Agenda
WASHINGTON - As president of the National Association of
Evangelicals, the Rev. Ted Haggard has advised the White House on
issues ranging from judicial appointments to steel tariffs.
But he also sought to widen the agenda of Christian evangelicals into
areas the Bush administration - and many of his Christian brethren -
would rather avoid.
Haggard resigned as president of the association, which says it
represents about 30 million evangelical church members, and took a
leave as senior pastor of the 14,000-member New Life Church in
Colorado Springs amid allegations that he paid a gay former escort
for sex and drugs.
Although he had been active in lobbying for conservative Christian
causes before, Haggard's profile rose after he became head of the NAE
early in 2003.
He made frequent visits to the White House and was included in a
select group of religious leaders briefed on the administration's
agenda during a weekly teleconference with White House staff, a
session meant to "feel the evangelical pulse," he's said.
"We have direct access (to the White House)," Haggard told a Wall
Street Journal reporter shortly before the last presidential
election, adding that he could take a concern to the president
through staff and get a response within 24 hours.
Asked Friday about the Haggard controversy, White House spokesman
Tony Fratto downplayed the pastor's connections to the Bush administration.
"He had been on a couple of (conference) calls but was not a weekly
participant in those calls," Fratto said, adding that Haggard had
been to the White House "one or two times."
"But there have been a lot of people who come to the White House," Fratto said.
Haggard keeps two framed photos of himself and President Bush on the
wall outside his church office but also has spoken admiringly in the
past of the faith of former Democratic presidents Bill Clinton and
Jimmy Carter.
Haggard was naturally on the "A" list of evangelical Christians
invited to the Bush White House for the signing of a bill banning
late-term abortions or to be called in advance of any announcement
for a chat about pending Supreme Court nominees.
Still, he criticized the White House for emphasizing the evangelical
faith of failed nominee Harriet Miers, rather than her judicial philosophy.
New Life Church sits near the United States Air Force Academy, and
Haggard has been at the forefront of evangelicals determined to stop
Pentagon regulations that might prevent military chaplains from evangelizing.
At the same time, Haggard has angered some religious conservatives
for urging Christians to protect Muslims in the days after the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks, and more recently for urging missionary
outreach to Muslims, but not to win converts or force Christianity on them.
Last summer, he joined an eclectic group of 27 religious leaders who
ruffled the White House with a statement published in newspaper
advertisements urging the government to "abolish torture now -
without exception" in dealings with prisoners, including those
suspected of terrorist activity.
In fact, Haggard has argued almost as frequently for freedom from
government intervention as he has freedom of religion. He was one of
the few religious conservatives to endorse a 2003 Supreme Court
decision striking down Texas' anti-sodomy law on privacy grounds.
In a 2004 interview with the Rocky Mountain News, Haggard told the
story of meeting with President Bush and a half-dozen other
evangelicals and using the occasion to argue against the extension of
steel tariffs.
"Your responsibility is the good of the people, and free trade is the
way we get cheaper steel," he recounted telling the president during
the session.
The taxes were dropped soon after the meeting.
Haggard's recent efforts promoted through the NAE a "broad biblical
agenda" that included improving health care, ending racism and
addressing global warming, which he recently declared should be an
evangelical priority.
Like the White House, however, Haggard seeks to find environmental
solutions through a free-market approach rather than through tight
government controls or taxes on emissions of greenhouse gases.
Although the association's board approved some broad goals for social
activism earlier this year, many Christian conservatives have
criticized the move for going beyond the "values" issues that have
traditionally been the political focus of the community.
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