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Like many long-term Microsoft (NasdaqNM: MSFT - News) employees, Jeff Koertzen toyed with the idea of leaving the company. But the event that prompted the human-resources manager to bolt for good was not a get-rich opportunity at a promising tech startup. Rather, it was the software giant's withdrawal of support for gay rights legislation in the state of Washington in mid-April after criticism from a local evangelical preacher. "This stupid move affected my decision," says Koertzen, a gay, six-year Microsoft employee who submitted his resignation on May 4. "I decided that now was time to go."B!jh
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Plenty of co-workers shared his outrage. Idealistic techies who believed that Microsoft was more than just an ordinary profit-driven company, that it stood for a set of progressive values, were crestfallen. "One of the reasons I came to Microsoft is because of its very strong stance on human rights," complained Robert Scoble, on his popular employee blog, Scobleizer, a few days after the company's position became public. By May 10 an internal petition urging the company to support the anti-discrimination bill had 1,741 signatures -- compared with 197 for a petition asking it to remain neutral.t5$H)
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All the pressure forced Chairman Bill Gates and CEO Steven Ballmer to do something quite rare: backtrack. On May 6, the company announced that it would support the legislation when it comes up in the next session (it failed by one vote). The decision followed a dramatic period of soul-searching at Microsoft......................&p-
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Evangelicals' influence in American political life has become increasingly visible in recent years. Now the battle over President George W. Bush's judicial appointments threatens to kick up a firestorm over the intrusion of religion into politics. But to many evangelicals, the campaign isn't controversial at all -- it's just one step in a long-range plan to leverage their growing numbers and political clout.
In fact, many of the evangelical activists who form the bedrock of the Religious Right are frustrated that their electoral successes haven't translated into greater gains. After all, their effort to get Christian voters to the polls played a key role in both of Bush's elections, as well as the GOP's control of both houses of Congress. Yet they can claim only a few victories, such as the 2003 ban on so-called partial-birth abortions -- and even that has been overturned by the courts................Ir_[i
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