- Jan 3, 2012
- 17,360
It's a really interesting question.In reality I have probably unknowingly voted for people in the past who did/do have religious views I find incompatible with my own secular values. If I know about it though then I think I would vote against them regardless of other issues we had in common because I think it insulting to people around me. I need to take more responsibility for researching the backgrounds of prospective political representatives. Perhaps we all should.
I would give absolutely no account at all to the religious views of any individual, unless it was the reason for some of their policies. A "Christians against Muslims" party or candidate, for example would not get my vote. Somebody advocating the ending of the right to abortion or condemning gay sex or marriage specifically would not get my vote, just as nobody who advocated bringing back capital punishment would ever get my vote for reasons of conscience.
Before this election just past, a body called the JPIT - Joint Public Issues team - which works on behalf of the Methodist, Baptist and United Reformed Churches and the Church of Scotland was urging people to vote and highlighting justfour areas to think about in light of one's faith. Gay sex/marriage was not one of them,
The four areas were:
The UK’s relationship with the European Union
Migration, forced displacement and the UK asylum system
Poverty and economic inequality in the UK
The UK’s role in the world.
Other things likely to figure in people's thinking within the Churches are environmental matters and Climate Change.
There's a link to it here, if anybody is interested: http://www.jointpublicissues.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/General-Election-2017-issues-PDF.pdf
It's telling people to think about things, not about what conclusions to reach or how to vote.