1960 and 2008: The Continuities and Disparities Between Obama and Kennedy

Boisi event image

Shaun Casey
Wesley Theological Seminary

Date:听October 21, 2009

Listen to Talk

Read Interview

Abstract

Commentators often draw comparisons between President John Kennedy and President Barack Obama.听 Shaun Casey, author of听The Making of a Catholic President: Kennedy vs. Nixon 1960, will examine the electoral strategies of both candidates with special attention to the role of religion in each campaign.听 Religion was a crucial factor in each election and both Kennedy and Obama deployed sophisticated faith outreach strategies to overcome weaknesses with major faith groups.

Speaker Bio

Shaun Casey

Shaun Casey听is a professor of Christian ethics and Director of the National Capital Semester for Seminarians (NCSS) at the Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington D.C. Casey served as senior advisor for religious affairs for the Obama campaign and was National Evangelical Coordinator in the 2008 presidential campaign. He received his Th.D. in Religion and Society from Harvard Divinity School and his M.P.A. from the Kennedy School of Government. His research interests include ethics and international affairs, the public implications of religious belief, and the intersection of religion and politics.听 He is most recently the author of听The Making of a Catholic President听(Oxford, 2009), a book on the state of the 鈥渞eligious question鈥 during the 1960 presidential campaign of the late John F. Kennedy. He is a member of the American Academy of Religion and serves on its Committee on the Public Understanding of Religion.

Event Photos

Boisi event

Shaun Casey at the Boisi Center

Boisi event
Boisi event

Photos by Christopher Soldt, 艾可直播 College MTS Photography

Event Recap

Shaun Casey, a professor of Christian ethics at the Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington, DC, spoke at the Boisi Center on October 21 about the parallels between the 1960 and 2008 presidential campaigns, particularly with regard to the so-called 鈥渞eligion question.鈥 As the author of a recent book on John F. Kennedy鈥檚 election, The Making of a Catholic President: Kennedy vs. Nixon 1960, and a director of religious outreach for the 2008 Obama presidential campaign, Casey offered a wealth of insight into how鈥攁nd how deeply鈥攔eligion influences and mobilizes American voters.

Religion was a critical issue in both the 1960 and 2008 campaigns. Kennedy鈥檚 Irish Catholic identity created great fear and suspicion about his ultimate loyalty鈥攚ould he bow to the Pope鈥檚 wishes on matters of American policy?鈥攚hile Obama faced criticism for his affiliation with black liberationist pastor Jeremiah Wright and suspicion of his Muslim family heritage and middle name.

Both candidates took the challenge seriously and employed remarkably similar political strategies, Casey argued. First, they sought to educate themselves about the contours of American religion in their day. Second, they were both eager to talk about matters of faith with leaders across the religious and political spectrum. Third, they both used speeches at crucial points in the campaign to assert their principles and address their critics head-on. And fourth, they hired dedicated staff members to reach out to specific religious communities.
Despite these important structural similarities, however, both the political context and the content of the candidate鈥檚 responses differed in crucial ways from 1960 to 2008. Kennedy answered questions about the role of religion in his political life by saying, in his famous September 1960 speech to a gathering of Protestant ministers in Houston, that his religious beliefs were his 鈥渙wn private affair,鈥 鈥渋mportant only to me,鈥 and would not prevent his support for strict separation of church and state. Obama, like most candidates in the 2008 campaign, took the opposite approach; in several key speeches (most notably his 2006 鈥淐all to Renewal鈥 speech and his 2008 鈥淢ore Perfect Union鈥 address) he carefully articulated the impact of his Christian faith on his views on race, social policy, war, and many other issues.

Casey closed his presentation by reflecting on the pioneering campaigns both presidents successfully employed, and speculated that future candidates would do well to learn from their efforts.

Read More

Further Reading

"'Call to Renewal' Keynote Address" by Sen. Barack Obama

"How America Decides" by Amy Sullivan

by Thomas J. Carty, 2008.

One electorate under God? : A Dialogue on Religion and American Politics,听edited by E.J. Dionne, Jr., Jean Bethke Elshtain, and Kayla M. Drogosz, 2004.

External Links

听interview on PBS听听