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d-36371House OversightOther

Proposed 'Ten Commendments' Limiting Religious Influence in Political Campaigns

The passage outlines a set of ethical guidelines for public officials regarding religion in politics. It contains no specific allegations, names, transactions, or actionable leads involving powerful a Suggests public officials should avoid invoking God or religion in partisan contexts. Recommends against using religious symbols or leaders for campaign advantage. Calls for separation of religious b

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #017403
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage outlines a set of ethical guidelines for public officials regarding religion in politics. It contains no specific allegations, names, transactions, or actionable leads involving powerful a Suggests public officials should avoid invoking God or religion in partisan contexts. Recommends against using religious symbols or leaders for campaign advantage. Calls for separation of religious b

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campaign-conductpoliticsethicsreligionhouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
4.2.12 WC: 191694 importantly, it requires a collective decision by public officials of all political stripes to agree to stop running as defenders of the faith and to end the contest over who is more religious or committed to “faith.” Religion and faith, as Jefferson recognized, are private matters and no one should be judged based on their “religious opinions, any more than [their] opinions in physics or geometry.” With this in mind, let me end this chapter with my own “Ten Commendments” (a commandment is a cross between a “commandment” and an “amendment” that I would “commend” candidates for following: 1. Do not claim God as a member of your party or that God is on your side of an issue. 2. Do not publicly proclaim your religious devotion, affiliation, and practices, or attack those of your opponents. 3. Do not denounce those who differ with you about the proper role of religion in public life as antireligious or intolerant of religion. 4. Do not surround your political campaign with religious trappings or symbols. 5. Honor and respect the diversity of this country, recalling that many Americans came to these shores to escape the tyranny of enforced religious uniformity and, more recently, enforced antireligious uniformity. 6. Do not seek the support of religious leaders who impose religious obligations on members of their faith to support or oppose particular candidates. 7. Do not accuse those who reject formal religion of immorality. Recall that some of our nation’s greatest leaders did not accept formal or even informal religion. 8. Do not equate morality and religion. Although some great moral teachers were religious, some great moral sinners also acted in the name of religion. 9. When there are political as well as religious dimensions to an issue, focus on the political ones during the campaign. 10. Remember that every belief is in a minority somewhere, and act as if your belief were the least popular. 316

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