No, I didn't mean it like that.
But on certain issues, religion has to come into the equation. For 85% of Canadians (amount of people affiliated with a religion in Canada), religion is probably the biggest, or Top 5, force in peoples lives.
Many issues effect religion, and it touches people so closely and its so personal.
I don't mean dictate a gov. on religion, but religion comes into a play ALOT in society...
Edit: Ok, many people in politics are religious. Lots of people. So what do you say to Christians in the House of Commons, when it comes to issues like abortion, same-sex marriage, and religious-close issues.
Are you saying elected people, can't vote on something based on their religious values, even though it could be the biggest force in their lives?
That to me is the troubling issue. Do you say a MP can't vote on a issue, based on his religious values?
Many religious MPs comed from religious ridings... and another thing is, people who are religious usually lean to the Conservative party.