Rightwing warrior Falwell has eyes on 2008
By Ed Stoddard
DALLAS (Reuters) - His influence may be diminished but his zeal is undaunted. Evangelist Jerry Falwell is on a mission to keep a like-minded Republican in the White House and get at least one more conservative judge on the Supreme Court.
Despite his years in the trenches of America's culture wars, Falwell -- who founded the Moral Majority political movement in 1979 and helped propel the rise of the religious right -- said a major victory in his broader crusade to restore the country's moral righteousness has so far eluded him.
With abortion still legal, prayer banned in public schools and pornography rife, he sees a long struggle ahead. For now, he is focusing on voter registration drives and rallying the faithful with his eyes on the twin prizes of the 2008 presidential election and control of the Supreme Court.
Some of his statements -- he famously blamed gays and lesbians for provoking the September 11 attacks -- have eroded some of his conservative support base. But he remains a rallying figure on the far U.S. right.
"I think we got the social and moral issues on the front burner. But while we have made progress ... we have not won any of the battles yet," Falwell told Reuters in an interview.
"It is a long road back. We are at least one U.S. Supreme Court Justice short of a socially conservative court," Falwell said on the sidelines of an evangelist conference in Dallas.
By a long road back Falwell was referring to his youth in the 1930s and 1940s -- a period he feels brought out the best in a strong nation that adhered to "old fashioned values".
Getting a Supreme Court -- whose members are appointed by the president -- that would overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion in America would be a major step down that road.
Ensuring another religious conservative Republican replaces President George W. Bush in the 2008 election is another.
CAUSING A STIR
Falwell, founder and pastor of a megachurch in Lynchburg, Virginia, provoked a storm of derision when he said gays, lesbians and abortionists were partly to blame for the hijacked plane attacks in September 2001.
He was later quoted by CNN as saying that only terrorists were to blame but he believed attempts to secularize America had prompted "God to lift the veil of protection" that had shielded the United States from attacks in the past.
The 73-year-old Falwell has used his multi-layered platform as a Baptist preacher, televangelist and university chancellor to promote the religious right -- a movement that seeks to redraw U.S. public policy along biblical lines and is associated with the Republican Party.
Critics contend it wants to impose an intolerant theocracy in America; cynics say it has been used by the Republican Party to galvanize its voter base without delivering victory in any of the battles that Falwell admits he has yet to win.
Supporters say the movement enjoys broad popularity in a country with 60 million evangelicals and that it harkens to the country's Christian roots. Continued...



