The incoming Obama administration is receiving advice from numerous quarters on positions it should take on issues of interest to various religious groups. Chicago Cardinal Francis George, president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, issued a statement (full text) welcoming the opportunity to work with Obama. The statement, which was unanimously approved by nearly 300 bishops, warned however: "The recent election was principally decided out of concern for the economy, for the loss of jobs and homes and financial security for families, here and around the world. If the election is misinterpreted ideologically as a referendum on abortion, the unity desired by President-elect Obama and all Americans at this moment of crisis will be impossible to achieve." Christianity Today reported on the statement.
Meanwhile Prof. Marci Hamilton posted an article at Findlaw titled The Five Religion-Related Issues that Should Most Concern the Future Obama Administration. Her suggested agenda for the new President includes: (1) End religious discrimination in programs that receive government funding; (2) choose an Attorney General, Solicitor General and, if necessary, Supreme Court Justices who demonstrate a healthy respect for the Establishment Clause and the separation of church and state; (3) support state measures to prevent and prosecute child sex abuse, even when it occurs within religious communities; (4) offer federal resources to investigate the abuses -- including child abuse -- that typically arise from polygamy.; (5) as part of the government's aid to homeowners, revoke laws that unfairly privilege religious groups in local zoning conflicts.