In case you missed it, there was a full-on blogswarm this week, centering around the growing rift between the Religious Left and the Religious Industrial Complex. The blogswarm was touched off by Sarah Posner's article in Religion Dispatches, itself a response to Dispatches from the Religious Left. PastorDan has a good, linky reflection on the blogswarm at Street Prophets; check it out if you want the gory details.
The main line of argument, which we've seen before, is something like this: Religious Left-ists argue that reproductive choice and gay rights are not compromise-able issues, they are fundamentally matters of conscience. Democrats should not seek to "split the difference" with moderate religious voters over these issues, because people's fundamental rights are not something we should haggle over. The Religious Industrial Complex, represented this week by Faith in Public Life, counsels Democrats to do exactly that, pleading that it is possible to win elections by cajoling swing voters on these sorts of issues.
The Religious-Industrial Complex (Digby's term, but popularized and used frequently by PastorDan) has been making these sorts of arguments for a long time, and I think they are largely dubious. For one thing, I'm not convinced that religious moderates can be convinced by hair-splitting on abortion and gay rights; any kind of faith-based voting in this year's election was clearly overwhelmed by economic-meltdown-based voting, and there were other issues confounding the 2006 election results, too. For another thing, I'm not sure we would want to do that even if we could. Atheists and non-Christians, two groups that are significantly more progressive than religious moderates, are also growing quickly in size. Because of that, appealing too heavily to religious moderates by giving up core convictions on reproductive choice and gay rights could be a double-whammy: not only would that roll back progress on important issues, it might be electorally disastrous.
But I will say this much about the Religious-Industrial Complex: it is well-organized and it does a good job of persuading politicians and framing issues. It is all well and good for the Religious Left to talk about prophetic vision and social justice - that is clearly important - but projecting power requires this sort of organization and persuasion.
That is a point made abundantly clear in Dispatches from the Religious Left, by Fred Clarkson, Marshall Ganz and others. But I think we have yet to really talk about what kind of organizing is necessary. Certainly, there is a need for more and better grassroots community organizing on localized but important issues - the kind of thing that the Industrial Areas Foundation does. Certainly, there is a need to engage and mobilize progressive religious folks. Progressive congregations are already involved in some of that work, althouth there is always room for improvement. But there is also a need to aggregate and consolidate religious power on a larger scale, and that is where progressive voices are largely silent.
While this sounds like a grand task, I actually think it is a bit simpler than that. Consider what the Religious-Industrial Complex has accomplished, with really a very small number of practitioners: a handful of charismatic and popular religious leaders, speakers and authors (Jim Wallis, Rick Warren, Joel Hunter); a snappy political action committee (the Matthew 25 Network); an inside-the-Beltway think tank (FiPL) and a well-placed political consultant (Mara Vanderslice of Common Good Strategies). I don't even think these folks are really all that tightly integrated, in the sense that, as far as I know, they don't coordinate in closed-door strategy sessions on how best to promote, as Jim Wallis calls it, the "radical center". There is, to be sure, a common vocabulary within the Religious Industrial Complex, and it doesn't hurt to have that vocabulary parroted in media, and to have that vocabulary commonly (if incorrectly) assumed to speak for a large bloc of voters.
It would be tempting to look at this constellation of assets and think, "gee, we could build one of those for ourselves" - and no doubt the Religious Left could. But rather than mimicking the Religious Industrial Complex, I think the Religious Left needs to come up with its own structures for making the basic point that that there is a large and growing bloc of voters sympathetic to the beliefs and values of religious progressives, and that it is possible to win elections, and to govern, with the support of that bloc.
My instinct tells me that the Religious Left will come to power through quite a different path than the Religious Industrial Complex. In particular, the progress on marriage equality in the next couple of years is going to be a proving ground. Already, the Religious Left has been out front and very active on this issue. But with the new Democratic trifecta in New York, we have the potential to make a large, pro-active, legislatively-won gain on this issue, in a huge and important state. The shape of religious lobbying in that battle will be quite different than the defensive posture taken in the battle to resist Goodridge overrides in Massachusetts, and I think (or hope, in any case) that it will help create a new class of political operators, capable of gathering and wielding progressive religious support.
There are other opportunities, too. With Democrats in power until at least 2012, we will see the emergence of a new green energy industry, a fight for universal health care coverage, and new opportunities (and urgent need for) more union organizing. Each of these issues offers a different set of opportunities for the Religious Left to work with a new set of allies, and to set the stage for the emergence of a more progressive Democratic party.
