FROM THE ARCHIVE
THURSDAY, JULY 19, 2001 Worried that religious groups could use federal funds to discriminate, the House on Thursday delayed a vote on a bill that implements President Bush's controversial faith-based initiative. Opponents, including Democrats and GOP moderates, argued the bill needed more protections against discrimination. But Republican sponsors say they will leave the bill intact and have scheduled a vote for today. Get the Story:
Faith Initiative Hits Snag In House (The Washington Post 7/18)
G.O.P. Moderates Deal New Setback to House Leaders (The New York Times 7/18)
You may have to register to read New York Times stories. If you do not wish to register, login with username indianz.com and password indianz.com Related Stories:
Faith-based bill scaled down (7/18)
White House changes anti-gay story (7/13)
Anti-gay policy was all but promised (7/12)
Bush won't help charity discriminate (7/11)
Charity relying on Bush for anti-gay policy (7/10)
White House apologizes for Muslim removal (6/29)
Changes made to faith-based bill (6/28)
Mayors endorse faith-based plan (6/26)
Faith-based bill still on backburner (6/25)
Faith-based bill under consideration (6/20)
Bush defends faith-based plan (6/6)
Faith-based bill delayed again (5/24)
Bush pushes new welfare reform (5/21)
Religious-only grant program changed (5/18)
Grant program restricted to religious groups (5/17)
Nominee wants to break church-state wall (5/10)
SURVEY: Americans have faith-based doubts (4/11)
Bush meets with religious leaders (3/20)
Faith-based bill delayed (3/14)
Changes due for faith-based program (3/12)
Defense of faith-based plan begins (3/8)
Bush launches defense of faith plan (3/7)
Bush's religious plan criticized (2/27)
Bush extols 'power of prayer' (02/02)
Bush calls up 'armies of compassion' (1/31)
Bush seeks to eliminate religious 'obstacles' (1/30)
Faith takes center stage with Bush (1/29)
House delays faith-based bill
Facebook TwitterTHURSDAY, JULY 19, 2001 Worried that religious groups could use federal funds to discriminate, the House on Thursday delayed a vote on a bill that implements President Bush's controversial faith-based initiative. Opponents, including Democrats and GOP moderates, argued the bill needed more protections against discrimination. But Republican sponsors say they will leave the bill intact and have scheduled a vote for today. Get the Story:
Faith Initiative Hits Snag In House (The Washington Post 7/18)
G.O.P. Moderates Deal New Setback to House Leaders (The New York Times 7/18)
You may have to register to read New York Times stories. If you do not wish to register, login with username indianz.com and password indianz.com Related Stories:
Faith-based bill scaled down (7/18)
White House changes anti-gay story (7/13)
Anti-gay policy was all but promised (7/12)
Bush won't help charity discriminate (7/11)
Charity relying on Bush for anti-gay policy (7/10)
White House apologizes for Muslim removal (6/29)
Changes made to faith-based bill (6/28)
Mayors endorse faith-based plan (6/26)
Faith-based bill still on backburner (6/25)
Faith-based bill under consideration (6/20)
Bush defends faith-based plan (6/6)
Faith-based bill delayed again (5/24)
Bush pushes new welfare reform (5/21)
Religious-only grant program changed (5/18)
Grant program restricted to religious groups (5/17)
Nominee wants to break church-state wall (5/10)
SURVEY: Americans have faith-based doubts (4/11)
Bush meets with religious leaders (3/20)
Faith-based bill delayed (3/14)
Changes due for faith-based program (3/12)
Defense of faith-based plan begins (3/8)
Bush launches defense of faith plan (3/7)
Bush's religious plan criticized (2/27)
Bush extols 'power of prayer' (02/02)
Bush calls up 'armies of compassion' (1/31)
Bush seeks to eliminate religious 'obstacles' (1/30)
Faith takes center stage with Bush (1/29)
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