Posted on 03/14/2012 6:37:47 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
In state after state, evangelicals have sent Mitt Romney a clear message: Were just not that into you.
Some evangelicals do pull the lever for Romney. But consistently there is a wide gap between Romneys support among evangelicals and his support among other groups. On average, there is a 19-point difference between Romneys support among non-evangelicals and his support among evangelicals in Republican primaries, according to ABC Newss survey of primary states with exit- or entrance-polling data available.
Thats a sizeable gap and one that has complicated Romneys path to the nomination.
Evangelical leaders are dismissive of the notion that Romneys faith is alienating a significant chunk of evangelical voters, though they acknowledge that it may be influencing a small number. Gary Bauer, president of American Values and a Rick Santorum supporter, points out that Mormons are key political allies. In the war over the kind of country we are, evangelicals and serious Catholics and Mormons tend to be all on the same side of the public-policy issues that are being debated in a campaign, he says.
Ralph Reed, founder and chairman of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, thinks that the Mormon issue was already hashed out in 2008. While Romney is not going to get some evangelicals votes as a result of it, I dont think that its a significant factor at all, he says, adding that Jon Huntsmans run also helped. The fact that you had two Mormons in the race just made it less of a novelty.
Reed says other factors account for this gap. I think the bigger issues have been his record as a governor of Massachusetts especially Romneycare and the fact that hes running in a primary against candidates who have been much more identified with the issues and values of voters of faith, he says.
Bob Vander Plaats, a prominent social-conservative activist in Iowa and head of the Family Leader, also highlights Romneys record in Massachusetts. We hear today thats he pro-life, but we also hear that when he was governor he put in $50 co-pay abortions in the state, he says. We hear today that Gods design for marriage [is] one man, one woman, yet he basically presided over same-sex marriage in the state.
The Romney campaign defends the ex-governors record on both matters, arguing that Massachusetts law and past court decisions made it illegal for a health-care plan not to fund abortions, and noting that Romney pushed for a state constitutional amendment to define marriage as between a man and a woman after same-sex marriage was legalized by the Massachusetts supreme court. But its likely Vander Plaats is not alone in his view of Romneys record on these issues.
Theres a trust gap, Vander Plaats adds. I think a lot of us conservatives feel that he will morph into who you want him to be depending on which campaign hes in.
Bauer agrees that some may be concerned that Romneys position switches arent authentic. However, he argues that the larger problem Romney faces is that even voters who are willing to believe he has sincerely changed his views are wary of his willingness to passionately fight on those issues. Evangelicals, Bauer observes, are doubtful that values issues would play much of a role in the expenditure of political capital or energy in his administration.
Referencing Mitch Danielss call for a truce on social issues, Bauer argues that its the Left, not the Right, that is more aggressively fighting the culture wars and that Romney is having trouble persuading voters he has enough fire in his belly to fight back. Theres this lack of confidence that he will make the case in these inevitable flare-ups persuasively and passionately like he means it, Bauer remarks.
But Romneys biggest problem when it comes to wooing evangelicals may be something outside of his control: his rivals. Hes got tough competition, particularly in Rick Santorum, observes Richard Land, director of the Southern Baptist Conventions Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission. Rick Santorums a tremendously appealing candidate to evangelicals because of his uncompromising pro-life and pro-family stands for many, many years.
Reed agrees that Santorums candidacy poses challenges to Romneys quest for evangelical votes, noting that Santorums deep and profound faith gives him an emotional connection with such voters.
Nonetheless, while Romney may not be connecting with a majority of evangelical voters, he doesnt usually need to. Unless its Iowa or South Carolina or Oklahoma, Romney needs to get about a third of these voters to win these primaries. He doesnt need to get a majority, he doesnt need to get a plurality, Reed notes, pointing to the fact that Romney won one out of every three evangelical voters in Michigan and Ohio. If Rick gets half that vote or a little more, and Romney gets a third of that vote, Romney is eking out victory, which is what he did in Michigan and Ohio.
But even if there is a path to Tampa that doesnt involve gaining significantly more evangelical support, Romney will nevertheless need every vote he can get in the general election. Even a slight decrease in the evangelical turnout could be hugely problematic, says Bauer, who predicts 2012 will be a base election and notes that if even 1 to 3 percent of voters stay home on Election Day that could throw one state or another in the wrong column.
Vander Plaats raises a different concern: Evangelicals might vote, but not volunteer for the campaign. Theres a big difference in having someone vote against Barack Obama versus voting enthusiastically for Mitt Romney, he remarks. Because if its an enthusiastic vote, theyve done the door-knocking, the phone calls [theyve been] influencing their network.
Other evangelical leaders disagree, arguing that evangelical voters will be energized by their determination to prevent a second Obama term. Whatever concerns they may have about Mormonism are trumped by their heightening fears of what may lay in store in a second Obama administration, Land says.
Reed agrees. I dont think you can underestimate the extent to which millions of evangelicals believe that preventing a second Obama term is a moral imperative, he says. There has never been an administration in U.S. history more hostile to the values held by conservative people of faith than the Obama administration
What Romney can do, say faith leaders, is try harder to woo evangelicals. He could help himself a lot if he would get into a fight with the president or somebody on the Left over a values issue, says Bauer. He says the right thing when hes asked about these things, but its almost always when hes asked.
If Romney becomes the nominee, there are additional steps he could take, including picking a running mate who appeals to evangelicals. He could opt to highlight issues dear to evangelicals in his convention speech: Reed thinks Romney should include more of the kind of talk that he had in his CPAC speech, in which he talked about his opposition to embryo harvesting and his efforts to fight for the restoration of traditional marriage in Massachusetts.
The fact that Santorum will have had his moment could also boost Romneys standing among evangelicals in the general election. I actually think that Santorum particularly getting a chance to have a full shot at it may actually benefit Romney, because social conservatives will feel like they had a fair shot, and they lost, Land says. And that will make it easier for them to unite around Romney than if they felt like they were double dealt out of a fair chance.
There are signs, too, that evangelicals arent so much opposed to a Romney presidency as they simply prefer his rivals. In Virginia, for instance, where neither Santorum nor Gingrich was on the ballot, Romney won 62 percent of the evangelical vote.
And for Romney, the last general election carries a hopeful precedent.
McCain similarly did very poorly among evangelicals throughout the primary, remarks Reed, pointing out that evangelicals preferred Mike Huckabee. And McCain had done himself no favors with evangelicals by calling Jerry Falwell one of the agents of intolerance in the United States in 2000.
Going into the general against Obama, you would have thought this was going to be a problem, Reed says of McCains difficulties. Instead, McCain who had apologized to Falwell in 2006 won evangelicals more handily than one of the most religious candidates in recent history. By the time we got to November, says Reed, McCain won a higher percentage of the evangelical vote than George W. Bush did in 2000.
Katrina Trinko is an NRO reporter.
So, in a race between Romney and Ron Paul, Romney only got 62% of the vote? That's not good news.
I lived in New England. It isn’t just the evangelicals. I’m about as far as you can get from evangelical and still be human and wouldn’t vote for that bas-turd on a bet.
vaudine
I am evangelical and the reason for not voting for Mittens has nothing to do with his mormonism. It’s based on the fact that he flip flops more than a fish out of water.
Freegards
Lex
RomneyCare = ObamaCare= AuschwitzCare = Holocaust II
Never Again is here, in my opinion, courtesy of this Regime and the US Congress. Instead of showers and a wooden bar of soap, We The People, will be given a pill and sent to a Government Hospice Center while your family members “plead for your life.” If you doubt what I’m predicting, please tell us how it differs. Ask yourself who Big Bro and Big Sis’s victims will be as they deny healthcare based on “their criteria.”
Could this be the Elitist Politician’s fix for Social Security excluding them, of course.
Evangelicals don’t much care about a candidate’s religion; they just want a president to lives and breathes conservativism. Mitt ain’t that guy. We knew that the day we learned he had to hire a coach to learn “conservative speak”. I think that was the day after he said he wanted to raise the minimum wage and conservatives freaked out. He’s clueless.
How would Southerner’s react to an honest Northern Candidate who honestly says — He isn’t much for eating grits? (instead of pretending he likes it)?
I spoke to a cousin of mine who lives in Huntsville, Alabama and he said — “Now such honesty would be refreshing.”
Are you kidding? I can hardly imagine voting for a man that thinks his destiny is to be a god on another planet.
In a nutshell, Mitt Romney is a flawed candidate with a fatal flaw, Romneycare!!! As you will clearly note, the Republican Primary voters are not listenting to a word that the Obamabot, media and pundits, including many Republican establishment type that Romney has the GOP nomination sewed up!!! This fight IMHO, will continue until at least June of this year!!!
The lamestream media is not being listed to, heeded and is now dead in the water. Obama is going down to defeat in November, big time. His “hope & change “ jive, works no more!!! The man is a disgrace to America, to his people and to himself, useless fool that he is!!!
Romney is about as much a Mormon as Nancy Pelosi is a Catholic, which is to say that he doesn't subscribe to the most basic tenets of Mormonism. But like Pelosi, Romney manages to skate with his church's leadership on his apostasy because of his power and money.
Under no circumstances will I ever stand before my Maker and explain that I supported a cultist who directly or through his organization proclaimed that:
I can’t because he’s a liberal and a liar.
I recall clearly that when Kennedy was running for president, many expressed concerns that the Pope would soon be calling the shots for JFK.
Religion is a factor, like it or not.
Romney is about as much a Mormon as Nancy Pelosi is a Catholic, which is to say that he doesn’t subscribe to the most basic tenets of Mormonism.
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You are kidding, right?!?!?! Just what ‘tenets’ does Mitt not subcribe to according to you?
Because the opposite is true, Mitt is a dyed in the wool, faithful, believing, practicing Mormon. He is actually the epitome of being a Mormon.
He is a liberal who lies to get what he wants BECAUSE he is a Mormon, not in spite of it. Sorry to burst your bubble.
I am not sure you know anything about mormonism to make the statement you have made.
Romney is mormonism. He is as high in the corporation as one came go without being one of the twelve.
Romney is who he is because of his mormonism not in spite of it.
There is nothing that Romney has done, or how he has governed that violate any mormonism principles.
Bears repeating...often.
I AM a Mormon. Have been for almost 72 years. I am disgusted with the General Authorities hiding under their desks with respect to Romney and Reid. Neither of them should be considered to be members in good standing for a number of positions that they have taken as politicians. So I have to disagree with your assessment. By the way, on a recent visit, I discussed the problems I have with Reid as regards his worthiness with the Home Teachers. Their response was that the entire Ward was up in arms that Reid had not already been excommunicated!!! I also think its a disgrace for Romney to use groups of missionaries and BYU students to “populate” his rallies. There is just nothing about Romney that any decent Mormon should respect. The idea that Romney is destined to be “called” to be a member of the Twelve causes me to shudder. He personifies the biblical passage: “though they draw near to me with their lips, their hearts, they are far from Me.”
I recall clearly that when Kennedy was running for president, many expressed concerns that the Pope would soon be calling the shots for JFK.
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There is a huge difference between JFK and the Pope and Mitt and the LDS prophet (Thomas S. Monson atm).
The first of which, the Pope presides universally but from Europe not the Western United States. He is European and would practically be more likely to insert himself in EU politics rather than US - but that is unlikely.
The LDS prophet has insterted himself in US politics in the past - even Bob Bennet addmitted that he was ‘forcefully encouraged’ and in one case even ordered to pass legislation/earmark that would directly benefit the Mormon church. Also, being a US religion (primarily) the LDS prophet (and the Mormon church is a very political animal despite their protestation to the contrary) is more interested in US politics.
There is also a differene in how the view their heirarchy. Mormon Hierarchy and demands for obedience are absolute in Mormonism. You get out of line (like historian Grant Palmer) you are punished.
Finally, Mitt as POTUS would be used for Propaganda purposes for the LDS church to lessen the tide of those leaving (like Glenn Beck). Also, I guarantee Mitt will be held up as a fulfillment of a prophecy Smith made about his own run for POTUS in 1844 just for this purpose.
So, while tempting, the comparison between JFK and Mitt just doesn’t hold water. Mormonism and Catholicism are vastly different.
The biggest tactic Liberals use is victimization. They think making Romney a victim of his religion will get him elected.
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