Monthly Archives: October 2008

Being A Values Voter

Israel 324 Earlier today I was listening to some podcast or radio program when I heard a woman announce herself as a “values voter.”

“Yep,” I’m a values voter,” she said. An air of satisfaction dripped from her voice. “I decide who I will vote on based on a few issues – prolife, gay marriage, prayer in schools…”

I had to get out of the car to make a pastoral visit so I couldn’t hear the rest of the interview, but the way that she defined what it meant to be a values voter intrigued me, and I’ve been thinking about it all afternoon.

I’m not sure who came up with the description “values voter” first, the political commentators or the consultants who slice and dice the electorate into smaller and smaller pieces. But in any case, the description “values voter” has come to describe those persons who are guided by a conservative religious agenda, usually defined by their pastor or some other charismatic religious figure (what Brian McLaren sometimes calls “the radio orthodoxy.”

It occurs to me that these are in fact not values voters, for they frankly aren’t voting out of a full value system, but rather along a narrow group of issues. To be more specific, these are litmus test voters, persons who check off “their” issues on a list and try to the best of their ability to elect candidates cast in their own personal image.

The use of the description “values voters” bothers me because I think all of us, including the litmus test group, are values voters. After all, we ALL choose candidates based on the values systems we hold – secular or religious, conservative or liberal, individualistic or communal. The way that we make decisions about policies and directions are determined by the values that we hold, and no one group has a monopoly on maintaining a value system.

When I consider how I determined who to vote for, I drew on my value system in making my decision. As one who is a self-described “communitarian” I shy away from the radical individualism that some candidates seem to promote, believing instead in the interdependence of all. That belief is based in my interpretation of the scriptures and the life and example of Jesus Christ, as well as a number of different forces that guide me to maintain faith in the power of communities to do the right thing. I may or may not agree with the woman above on the issues she mentions, but my approach to those issues is based in the valuing of communal discernment and what King called the “inescapable network of mutuality.”

Thus, I am a values voter. I probably would fail the litmus test (although some would be surprised at how I respond in some issues) but there is no doubt that it is the values I hold that determine how I vote.

And I would dare say that it is probably true for you as well.

Exercising My Right

ivotedDo you ever think much about your rights?

Oh, I suppose that we hear some pundit or newsmaker every day talk about rights in some way or another, or some wild eyed radical is standing outside the local grocery shouting that his rights have been infringed upon.

However, in the day to day getting by that most of us live, I imagine that there are few times when those of us in the U.S. are actually conscious of the rights we hold in this place. We take them for granted, assuming that they will always be around, trusting that the ACLU or Fox News has them under control.

Perhaps the most basic right we hold beyond the right for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness is the right of the vote. Of course, that hasn’t always been a right for all of us. Women were disenfranchised for many years and it was only the Voting Rights Act of 1964 that truly brought equality in voting to African Americans and other minorities. But today, in 2008, there are very few excuses not to vote.

Right now, I am feeling somewhat self righteous about this because just about an hour ago I stepped into the local early voting office in my neighborhood and cast my ballot. It wasn’t difficult. There weren’t especially long lines (the workers said that this was the only location that didn’t have long lines, partially because it is new and not many folks know about it). I showed my ID, signed a piece of paper, and the next thing I knew I was standing behind a touch screen entering my selections.

I’m not going to say much about who I voted for, although if you have been around this blog it should be pretty clear (no Bradley Effect moments for me!). However, it isn’t the personality that is important. It is the ability to step forward and make my opinion known in a formal way, attempting to steer the direction of this place where I live by the most important resource I have – my vote.

I normally wait until the official election day to vote, choosing to be a part of what I experience as a big national party (frankly, it should be a national holiday, and the government should supply free beverages to everyone who votes!). However, as we did in the last presidential election, we will be handing out coffee and donuts to the folks coming into the church to vote (we are a voting precinct) and I usually can’t get free to cast my own vote when I am playing host. So I voted early, and I have to say that there is a great deal of satisfaction knowing that for me everything is settled for a while.

It’s too late most everywhere to register, so if you forgot you are frankly out of luck. But I want to encourage everybody who IS registered to exercise the right. To fail to do so is to trample of the witness of those who came before, and cause you to lose any right to complain when things get tough.