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06/06/11 6:37 AM

#142362 RE: F6 #140244

Republican contenders compete for Christian conservatives


U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) was a favorite at the Faith and Freedom Coalition conference, generating the most enthusiastic response from the hundreds of delegates in attendance.
(MOLLY RILEY, REUTERS / June 3, 2011)


Presidential candidates such as Michele Bachmann, Mitt Romney and Tim Pawlenty attend the Faith and Freedom Coalition conference, where hundreds of delegates scope out their options.

By Paul West, Washington Bureau
June 5, 2011

Reporting from Washington— Competition for the hearts and votes of Christian conservatives is as wide open as the broader 2012 Republican contest, if a two-day gathering of political activists is any indication.

Virtually all of the Republican presidential contenders appeared before the Faith and Freedom Coalition conference in Washington, which ended Saturday. Each was warmly received by hundreds of delegates from across the country, though Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann generated the most enthusiastic response.

Social conservatives aren't "any different from other primary voters. A huge number of them are just totally undecided," said Ralph Reed, a longtime religious-right strategist who founded the sponsoring group, designed to bring evangelicals and "tea party" voters under the same tent.

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee's recent decision to pass up the 2012 campaign left a vacuum that remaining candidates are attempting to fill. Four years ago, Huckabee, a former Southern Baptist minister, won Iowa's leadoff caucuses.

Bachmann, expected to announce her presidential intentions this month in Iowa, repeatedly brought the crowd out of its chairs with a blend of red-meat rhetoric and autobiographical detail. She attacked Planned Parenthood as a "corrupt organization," swore a tireless commitment to repeal of "Obamacare," deplored what she claimed was Obama's "shocking" betrayal of Israel, and finished up, eyes closed, with a two-minute prayer.

Also addressing the audience were former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who described the federal debt as a "moral tragedy," and former U.S. ambassador to China Jon Huntsman, who touted his record as an abortion foe and tax cutter while governor of Utah. Both are Mormons, which, according to a recent Pew Center opinion survey, puts them at a disadvantage in seeking support from white evangelical Protestants.

Huntsman, a day after leaving the event, said he planned to skip Iowa's caucuses, where evangelical Christians cast as much as 60% of the vote. Romney has not committed to competing aggressively there either. That apparent skittishness led a prominent social conservative to question the sincerity of their appeals for evangelical support.

"The bottom line is, if they come to this conference and play to this crowd and say the things they want us to hear, but they won't come to Iowa, that's a double standard," said Steve Scheffler, who heads the Iowa affiliate of Reed's organization and also is the state's Republican national committeeman.

Huntsman couched his Iowa decision in terms of his opposition to federal subsidies for agriculture and ethanol. But a rival GOP candidate, Tim Pawlenty, who has already come out against continued ethanol subsidies, is counting heavily on Iowa to propel him into contention.

Pawlenty, a former Minnesota governor, drew applause at the Faith and Freedom event Friday night when he said Republicans must have the courage to tell voters the truth, even if it comes with risk.

"And so, when I started my campaign, I went to the all-important state of Iowa and said, even for people in Iowa, there are some real truths we're going to have to tell. That means we're going to have to phase out the ethanol subsidies," Pawlenty, an evangelical Christian, said to applause from the crowd.

Pawlenty "probably impressed me the most," said Kit Burns, 59, an architect from Seattle. But he said it was still too early for him to back a candidate.

Miriam Corbin, 60, a municipal employee in Atlanta, would be backing Huckabee if he were in the race. Instead, she's leaning toward Bachmann.

"She's smart. She's savvy," Corbin said. "She's run a business, raised children and she has strong religious convictions. I think that's important in our next leader."

Republican hopes for retaking the White House have brightened as a sputtering economic recovery and rising unemployment threaten Obama's reelection chances. But activists attending the conference were warned repeatedly about the dangers of getting bogged down in fights over ideological purity, which could fragment the conservative opposition.

"In politics, purity is the enemy of victory," said Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, a former Republican national chairman. "We can't start out with the idea, as the Faith and Freedom Coalition, that our candidate's got to agree with me on every single thing. We cannot expect our candidate to be pure. Winning is about unity."

Barbour said afterward, in response to reporters' questions, that he wasn't referring to Romney, the nominal front-runner whose past support for gay rights and abortion rights is a nonstarter for some conservatives.

Reed said he wasn't overly concerned that tea partyers and evangelicals would balk at supporting a nominee they considered insufficiently conservative, because of their desire to defeat Obama.

He did say the GOP would be in trouble if it did not find a way to make inroads among younger voters, women, Latinos, African Americans, Asians and other minorities. To win in the future, Republicans must practice "the politics of addition, not subtraction, and grow the pie," Reed said.

paul.west@latimes.com
Times staff writer Seema Mehta in North Conway, N.H., contributed to this report.


Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-religious-conservatives-20110605,0,212779.story [with comments]

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F6

06/30/11 1:55 AM

#145645 RE: F6 #140244

Editorial: Eight myths to chill an old-school Republican soul


R.J. Matson/St. Louis Post-Dispatch

By the Editorial Board
Posted: Sunday, June 26, 2011 12:00 am

When Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., quit [ http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/politics/jan-june11/debttalks_06-23.html ] the (no longer) bipartisan deficit-reduction talks last week, it was not exactly a "Profiles in Courage" [ http://www.jfklibrary.net/Events-and-Awards/Profile-in-Courage-Award/About-the-Book.aspx ] moment.

Serious deficit reduction can't be — and shouldn't be — accomplished without tax increases and broad elimination of tax expenditures, which would have the effect of raising taxes. The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform last year acknowledged [ http://douthat.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/12/03/the-success-of-simpson-bowles/ ] that.

But tax increases, in whatever guise, fail the current Republican purity laws. Mr. Cantor, who will be running for reelection next year, understands that very well. So does Mr. Kyl, who won't seek reelection in 2012 — though he's generously offered himself [ http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/143259-kyl-openly-courts-2012-vice-presidential-nomination ] as a vice presidential nominee.

It's sad to see what has happened to the Party of Lincoln, and for that matter, the party of lesser mortals like George H.W. Bush of Texas, Bob Dole of Kansas and Jack Danforth of Missouri. No one ever would mistake them for liberals, but they were statesmen who put country before party.

Today we have the spectacle of smart, patriotic men and women putting their brains and integrity on ice to please a party dominated by anti-intellectual social Darwinists and the plutocrats who finance and mislead them.

Consider the mythology that makes up GOP orthodoxy today. Imagine the contortions that cramp the brains and souls of men and women of intelligence and compassion who seek state and national office under the Republican banner.

They must believe, despite the evidence of the 2008 financial collapse, that unregulated — or at most, lightly regulated — financial markets are good for America and the world.

They must believe in the brilliantly cast conceit known as the "pro-growth agenda," in which economic growth can be attained only by reducing corporate and individual tax rates, especially among the investor class, and by freeing business from environmental rules that have cleaned up America's air and water and labor regulations that helped create America's middle class.

Though rising health care costs are pillaging the economy, and even though health care in America is now a matter of what you can afford, Republican candidates for office must deny that health care is a basic right and resist a real attempt to change and improve the system.

GOP candidates must scoff at scientific consensus about global warming. Blame it on human activity? Bad. Cite Noah's Ark [ http://www.esquire.com/blogs/politics/john-shimkus-global-warming-111210 ] as evidence? Good. They must express at least some doubt about the science of evolution.

They must insist, statistics and evidence to the contrary, that most of the nation's energy needs can be met safely with more domestic oil drilling, "clean-coal" technology and greater reliance on perfectly safe nuclear power plants.

They must believe that all 11.2 million undocumented immigrants living in the United States can be rounded up, detained, tried, repatriated and kept from returning at a reasonable cost.

Even though there are more than four unemployed persons for every available job, GOP candidates should at least hint that unemployment benefits keep people from seeking jobs.

They must believe that the Founding Fathers wanted to guarantee individuals the absolute right to own high-capacity, rapid-fire weapons that did not exist in the late 18th century.

By no means is this list complete. It almost makes you feel sorry for the people who pretend to believe this stuff. Almost.

Copyright 2011 STLtoday.com (emphasis in original(

http://www.stltoday.com/news/opinion/columns/the-platform/article_b477e0fb-aab4-5d8e-90fe-c42826da31dd.html

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