Tuesday, June 28, 2016

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and politics in the United States

Early in its history, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) had a series of negative encounters with the United States federal government. This led to decades of mistrust, armed conflict and the eventual disincorporation of the church by an act of the U.S. Congress. The relationship between the church and the government eventually improved and in recent times LDS Church members have served in leadership positions in Congress and held other important political offices. 19th Century: Many of the political problems faced by the LDS Church stemmed from the controversial practice of polygamy. The practice started with Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism, secretly taking on additional wives and was practiced publicly after his death. Joseph Smith: In 1839, Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, visited U.S. president Martin Van Buren to plead for the U.S. to help roughly 20,000 Mormon settlers of Independence, Missouri. The Governor of Missouri, Lilburn Boggs, in attempt to resolve the 1838 Mormon War, had issued an executive order on October 27, 1838, known as the "Extermination Order". It authorized troops to use force against Mormons to "exterminate or drive [them] from the state". In 1839, after moving to Illinois, Smith and his party appealed to members of Congress and to President Van Buren to intercede for the Mormons. According to Smith's grandnephew, Van Buren said to Smith, "Your cause is just, but I can do nothing for you; if I take up for you I shall lose the vote of Missouri". When the Mormon population was concentrated in Nauvoo, Illinois, an Anti-Mormon party sprung up to oppose Mormon political influence in the state. After his experience with Van Buren and finding no support from any of the other presidential candidates, Smith decided to run as an independent in the 1844 election for President of the United States. He proposed the redemption of slaves by selling public lands and decreasing the size and salary of Congress; the closure of prisons; the annexation of Texas, Oregon, and parts of Canada; the securing of international rights on high seas; free trade; and the re-establishment of a national bank. His top aide, Brigham Young, campaigned for Smith saying, "He it is that God of Heaven designs to save this nation from destruction and preserve the Constitution." The campaign ended when Smith was attacked and killed by a mob while in the Carthage, Illinois, jail on June 27, 1844. Utah Territory and Statehood: After Smith's death, the majority of Latter Day Saints followed Young who made plans to move everyone to the Salt Lake Valley. Young petitioned President Polk for federal assistance for their westward migration. Assistance came in the form of the enlistment of around 500 Mormons in the U.S. Army during the war with Mexico. The men's salaries were used to help pay for the migration of the larger body of the saints. In the 1870s, the People's Party was created in Utah Territory and backed by the LDS Church. The anti-Mormon Liberal Party existed at the same time but won few elections. During the presidential election of 1856 a key plank of the newly formed Republican Party's platform was a pledge "to prohibit in the territories those twin relics of barbarism: polygamy and slavery." President James Buchanan sent U.S. forces to Utah in 1857–58 in order to appoint a new governor over the territory and take control away from church president Brigham Young. These events were known as the Utah War. In 1882, Congress passed the Edmunds Act, which made polygamy a felony. More than 1,300 Mormon men were imprisoned under the terms of the act. Church president John Taylor was forced to go into hiding for several years frequently moving to avoid capture from the federal authorities. In 1887, Congress enacted the Edmunds–Tucker Act, in response to the LDS Church's practice of polygamy. The act disincorporated the church and seized its assets. The act was also responsible for disenfranchising women, which had been given the right to vote in Utah before any of the 37 states at that time. Women voters in the state were disproportionately female, so giving women the right to vote and rescinding that right was a way to control Mormon influence on elections. In the 1890 Manifesto, church president Wilford Woodruff stated that the church had ended the contracting of new polygamous marriages. Campaigning against polygamy had been a focus of the Liberal Party. With that issue resolved and with the entrance of the major national parties into the state, the Liberal Party disbanded. The Republican Party had opposed statehood for Utah. Because of this, the majority of Mormons in Utah leaned Democrat. However, church leaders realized that they would never gain statehood unless the population was more evenly split between the two national parties. The People's Party was dissolved and church leaders asked some families to become Republicans in order to balance out the vote. In 1895, Woodruff instituted a rule, informally known as the Mormon Political Manifesto, that general authorities of the church should not seek political office without prior permission of the First Presidency. In 1898, B. H. Roberts became the first church member to be elected to Congress. Due to Roberts being a polygamist, he was refused a seat in the Congress. 20th Century: In 1903, the Utah State Legislature elected Reed Smoot to the U.S. Senate. Smoot was an apostle in the LDS Church. His election was controversial due to fears over his allegiance to the church. A hearing was held to determine if Smoot should be allowed a seat in the Senate; the hearing lasted four years, called 100 witnesses and generated 3,500 pages of testimony. Ultimately, Smoot was permitted to take his seat in the Senate. In 1904, the American Party was formed in Utah in an attempt to revive the anti-Mormon Liberal Party. The party lasted until 1911. During the administration of Heber J. Grant, an effort was made to remove from church literature, sermons, and ceremonies any suggestion that Latter-day Saints should seek vengeance on the citizens or government of the United States for past persecutions of the church and its members, and in particular for the assassinations of church founder Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum. This policy became known as the Good Neighbor policy. Grant, a Democrat, was opposed to the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) and caused a front-page editorial to be written to that effect in the church-owned Deseret News. Grant shared the view of J. Reuben Clark and David O. McKay that the New Deal was socialism, something they all despised. FDR had campaigned on a platform that included the repeal of alcohol prohibition; meanwhile, Grant was a leader in the Utah state Prohibition movement and was the president of a church that preached abstinence from alcohol. Despite this, FDR won Utah in each of his four elections. Grant, seeing the majority of the church members supporting FDR, regarded this as "one of the most serious conditions that has confronted me since I became President of the Church." Later, when Utah voters agreed by plebiscite to become the 36th state to ratify the Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution, thus completing the process of ratification and repealing Prohibition, Grant was devastated; in a general conference, he told the Latter-day Saints, "I have never felt so humiliated in my life over anything as that the State of Utah voted for the repeal of Prohibition." David O. McKay, a Republican who became president of the church in 1951, was able to establish friendly relationships with President Dwight D. Eisenhower. McKay supported church apostle Ezra Taft Benson in his role as Eisenhower's Secretary of Agriculture. President Lyndon B. Johnson invited McKay to visit him in the White House. Benson was president of the church from 1985 to 1994. During the 1968 election, George W. Romney was also the first Mormon to stage a credible run for the presidency. By this time, he was well known as a Mormon and perhaps the most nationally visible one since Brigham Young. But his membership in the LDS Church was scarcely mentioned at all during the campaign. Romney did not receive the nomination but after the election Nixon appointed him to his cabinet as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. During the administration of Spencer W. Kimball, the church spoke out in opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment. 21st Century: In 2004, church president Gordon B. Hinckley was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by George W. Bush. In 2008, the church was involved in promoting California Proposition 8, which amended the California constitution to prohibit same-sex marriages. When Mitt Romney, son of former presidential candidate George Romney, ran for President of the United States in 2008, it was the first year that a member of the LDS Church received the nomination from one of the two major American parties. At the time, the Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid, was also a member of the LDS Church. A 2012 Pew Center survey on Religion and Public Life indicates that 74 percent of U.S. Latter-day Saints church members lean towards the Republican Party. Some liberal members have stated that they feel that they have to defend their worthiness due to political differences.[30] In recent decades, the Republican Party has consistently won a majority of the LDS vote in most national and state-level elections. As a result, Utah, a state with a majority LDS population, is also one of the most heavily Republican states in the country.

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