Site search
sponsored by
Just as news breaks that political fundraising is down for both parties, Republicans have lost one of their more generous contributors.
In what one might call a biblical move, Christian philanthropist Howard Ahmanson one of three major funders of Californias Proposition 8, which bans same-sex marriages has abandoned the GOP for the Democratic Party.
No one ever said the multimillionaire isnt idiosyncratic.
In a rare interview Thursday, Ahmanson shared some of his thoughts about why he switched parties. In a word, taxes.
Specifically, he was offended by the California Republican Partys insistence during a recent state budget battle that there would be no tax increases for any reason, no matter what. Theyre providing one issue and its just a very silly issue, Ahmanson told me by telephone.
So, without fanfare, Ahmanson printed out an online form and mailed in his Democratic Party registration. Thus far, hes heard nothing back, but confesses to hoping hell receive a little card or something.
Ahmanson, who was born to and inherited great wealth, has spent a lifetime trying to figure out what to do with his good fortune. It has been, at times, a burden of guilt, complicated by a lonely childhood. He also has Tourettes syndrome, which has contributed to his reclusiveness.
Ahmanson, 58, is one of the nations leading evangelical Christians and one of conservatisms most reliable supporters, though he is hardly a Republican talking-point man. He thinks those who argue for school prayer, for instance, are confusing the moral with the religious. Morality is how we relate to one another, he says. Religion is how we relate to God and its not the governments business.
One cant mention Ahmanson without also discussing his association with Calvinist theologian R.J. Rushdoony, who believed in a literal application of biblical teachings and is credited with inspiring the Christian home-schooling movement.
Rushdoonys ideas once captured Ahmansons imagination but he has mellowed. Ahmanson doesnt believe that homosexuals should be executed. He does believe that gays should come to Christ and then recover.
Ahmansons conversion to the Democratic Party, following decades of donating millions to conservative think tanks and causes, certainly qualifies as a shocker in political circles. What!!!!! has been the typical response.
It isnt possible to draw conclusions about the direction of the Republican Party based on Ahmansons joining the enemy camp. He did make some observations about the GOP, however, and sees the partys current problems as tension between the upscales and the downscales the upper middle classes and the lower middle classes.
If I were in the GOP, Id advocate the party should be downscaling. Heading, that is, toward a populist position.
He liked Sarah Palin all right, but says Im now a blue dog Democrat for Bobby Jindal in 2012. And on Barack Obama, its too early to tell, he says. He may do well or he may not do well.
Ahmanson was disappointed by Obamas overturning of Bush administration restrictions on abortion and embryonic stem cell research. It is probably safe to say that when Democrats decided they needed to start talking more about faith and take God back from the GOP, they hadnt quite figured on landing Ahmanson. But Ahmanson is certain hell find friends among Democrats who believe, as he does, that conservative ideas are not exclusively Republican.
On the other hand, he says that Democrats who have contacted him think he will be disappointed to find a lack of support for his views. Says Ahmanson: Well see how tolerant they really are.
Parker is a columnist for The Washington Post Writers
In what one might call a biblical move, Christian philanthropist Howard Ahmanson one of three major funders of Californias Proposition 8, which bans same-sex marriages has abandoned the GOP for the Democratic Party.
No one ever said the multimillionaire isnt idiosyncratic.
In a rare interview Thursday, Ahmanson shared some of his thoughts about why he switched parties. In a word, taxes.
Specifically, he was offended by the California Republican Partys insistence during a recent state budget battle that there would be no tax increases for any reason, no matter what. Theyre providing one issue and its just a very silly issue, Ahmanson told me by telephone.
So, without fanfare, Ahmanson printed out an online form and mailed in his Democratic Party registration. Thus far, hes heard nothing back, but confesses to hoping hell receive a little card or something.
Ahmanson, who was born to and inherited great wealth, has spent a lifetime trying to figure out what to do with his good fortune. It has been, at times, a burden of guilt, complicated by a lonely childhood. He also has Tourettes syndrome, which has contributed to his reclusiveness.
Ahmanson, 58, is one of the nations leading evangelical Christians and one of conservatisms most reliable supporters, though he is hardly a Republican talking-point man. He thinks those who argue for school prayer, for instance, are confusing the moral with the religious. Morality is how we relate to one another, he says. Religion is how we relate to God and its not the governments business.
One cant mention Ahmanson without also discussing his association with Calvinist theologian R.J. Rushdoony, who believed in a literal application of biblical teachings and is credited with inspiring the Christian home-schooling movement.
Rushdoonys ideas once captured Ahmansons imagination but he has mellowed. Ahmanson doesnt believe that homosexuals should be executed. He does believe that gays should come to Christ and then recover.
Ahmansons conversion to the Democratic Party, following decades of donating millions to conservative think tanks and causes, certainly qualifies as a shocker in political circles. What!!!!! has been the typical response.
It isnt possible to draw conclusions about the direction of the Republican Party based on Ahmansons joining the enemy camp. He did make some observations about the GOP, however, and sees the partys current problems as tension between the upscales and the downscales the upper middle classes and the lower middle classes.
If I were in the GOP, Id advocate the party should be downscaling. Heading, that is, toward a populist position.
He liked Sarah Palin all right, but says Im now a blue dog Democrat for Bobby Jindal in 2012. And on Barack Obama, its too early to tell, he says. He may do well or he may not do well.
Ahmanson was disappointed by Obamas overturning of Bush administration restrictions on abortion and embryonic stem cell research. It is probably safe to say that when Democrats decided they needed to start talking more about faith and take God back from the GOP, they hadnt quite figured on landing Ahmanson. But Ahmanson is certain hell find friends among Democrats who believe, as he does, that conservative ideas are not exclusively Republican.
On the other hand, he says that Democrats who have contacted him think he will be disappointed to find a lack of support for his views. Says Ahmanson: Well see how tolerant they really are.
Parker is a columnist for The Washington Post Writers


News












