Bushism Made Catholic:
When Bush met with journalists from religious publications last year,
the living authority he cited most often was not a fellow Evangelical
but a man he calls Father Richard, who, he explained, "helps me
articulate these [religious] things." A senior Administration
official confirms that Neuhaus "does have a fair amount of
under-the-radar influence" on such policies as abortion, stem-cell
research, cloning and the defense-of-marriage amendment.
Neuhaus, 68, is well-prepared for that role. As founder of the
religion-and-policy journal First Things, he has for years
articulated toughly conservative yet nuanced positions on a wide
range of civic issues. A Lutheran turned Catholic priest, he can
translate conservative Protestant arguments couched tightly in
Scripture into Catholicism's broader language of moral reasoning,
more accessible to a general public that does not regard chapter and
verse as final proof. And there is one last reason for Bush to
cherish Neuhaus, who has worked tirelessly to persuade conservative
Catholics and Evangelicals to make common cause. It's called the
conservative Catholic vote, and it played a key role last November.