Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, July 21, 2006
Apparent New Mexican President May Bring Changes In Church-State Policy
An article from McClatchy Newspapers today reports that unless Mexico's Federal Electoral Tribunal overturns the disputed July 2 presidential election, Filepe Calderon will be the first Mexican president out of a tradition of conservative Catholicism that gave rise to the Cristero guerrilla movement. That movement, to which Calderon's father belonged, opposed Mexico's anti-clerical policies 80 years ago. The article traces the apparent president's deeply religious background and the uncertainties that this poses for a country that has had a strong tradition of church-state separation.