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February 11, 2008
 Are Young Evangelicals Skewing More Liberal?
ABC News
A younger generation of evangelical Christians is coming of age -- and as they head to the polls, they are breaking from their parents and focusing on a broader range of issues than just abortion and gay marriage.
This weekend at a concert and a rally in New York City, a huge gathering of Christian youth came together to decry the coarsening of culture.
"What should be done to stop glamorizing the things that are destroying my friends, your friends -- like drugs, alcohol and sex?" cried a young evangelical.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right]
February 09, 2008
 Huckabee: Dobson's Choice
The Wall Street Journal
Mike Huckabee this week picked up the endorsement of Focus on the Family founder James Dobson, who reiterated his statement Tuesday that he could not vote for presumptive Republican Presidential nominee John McCain even in November against a Democrat. Speaking of Senator McCain, the Christian broadcaster said "His record on the institution of the family and other conservative issues makes his candidacy a matter of conscience and concern for me."
We haven't endorsed any candidate, and it's up to Mr. McCain to convince Mr. Dobson that he's worthy of his vote. But for the network of socially conservative activists who are now such a large part of the Republican Party, this is also an instructive moment. They have to decide if they care more about achieving their policy goals than they do about being kingmakers within the GOP.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Huckabee, Religion]
January 26, 2008
 Is Dobson's Political Clout Fading?
Time Magazine
James Dobson, the founder and head of the evangelical media and counseling group Focus on the Family, is constantly described by the media as a power broker, kingmaker, and "the Christian right's most powerful leader." As such, his endorsement is seen as key by G.O.P. presidential candidates in the 2008 race. On Wednesday night, his political action website Citizenlink.com released assessments of the major Democratic and Republican candidates — and political observers immediately checked in to see whether Dobson's organization was leaning toward Mike Huckabee or Mitt Romney, the two G.O.P. candidates who have made the biggest play for the evangelical vote. As Focus on the Family weighs in on the presidential race, however, an examination of the group's records shows that its influence may not be all that it once was, and that its actual base may have become smaller.
For months, Dobson has been playing it coy, seeming to favoring the Mormon Mitt Romney over Baptist preacher Mike Huckabee, who would otherwise appear to be the natural Christian right choice. In December, Dr. Dobson praised a Romney speech as "a magnificent reminder of the role religious faith must play in government and public policy. His delivery was passionate and his message inspirational." Dobson even made a congratulatory phone call to the candidate.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right]
January 14, 2008
 Huckabee Splits Young Evangelicals and Old Guard
The New York Times (register)
WASHINGTON — Much of the national leadership of the Christian conservative movement has turned a cold shoulder to the Republican presidential campaign of Mike Huckabee, wary of his populist approach to economic issues and his criticism of the Bush administration’s foreign policy. But that has only fired up Brett and Alex Harris.
The Harris brothers, 19-year-old evangelical authors and speakers who grew up steeped in the conservative Christian movement, are the creators of Huck’s Army, an online network that has connected 12,000 Huckabee campaign volunteers, including several hundred in Michigan, which votes Tuesday, and South Carolina, which votes Saturday.
They say they like Mr. Huckabee for the same reason many of their elders do not: “He reaches outside the normal Republican box,” Brett Harris said in an interview from his home near Portland, Ore.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Huckabee]
 Analysis: Can Huckabee Broaden Appeal?
Associated Press via NYT
MADISON HEIGHTS, Mich. (AP) -- This much is known: Mike Huckabee, a one-time Southern Baptist preacher, attracts fellow Christian evangelicals in droves.
Still a question is whether can he appeal to a broader scope of the GOP electorate and swing voters the Republican Party needs to beat Democrats in November.
The answer could come Tuesday when Michigan votes.
Demographically, the Midwestern state looks more like the country than Iowa and New Hampshire. Independents and Democrats also can vote in the Republican primary. That makes Michigan a test of whether Huckabee's populist pitch can pull in GOP moderates and others uneasy with his hard-right stances on cultural issues, outward emphasis on faith and mixed record on economic issues.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Huckabee]
December 07, 2007
 Religion a Factor in Election Like Never Before in Modern Era
ABC News
The presidential campaign of Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-NY, fired a county campaign chairman in Iowa Wednesday for forwarding an email accusing Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. of secretly praying to Allah.
Nightline: Romney Defines His Religion's Role"There's an email floating around that says I am a Muslim plant, planning to take over America. This would surprise my pastor at Trinity United Church of Christ," Obama said earlier this year.
This heavenly smear wasn't really so unusual. You can't spend any time on the campaign trail this year without bumping into God.
Former Arkansas governor and Baptist minister Mike Huckabee is now leading in polls of likely Republican caucus-goers in Iowa. Why? Huckabee explained last week at Liberty University's convocation.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion]
December 05, 2007
 Huckabee Bristles at Creationism Query
Associated Press via NYT
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, a Southern Baptist preacher who has surged in Iowa with evangelical Christian support, bristled Tuesday when asked if creationism should be taught in public schools.
Huckabee -- who raised his hand at a debate last May when asked which candidates disbelieved the theory of evolution -- asked this time why there is such a fascination with his beliefs.
''I believe God created the heavens and the Earth,'' he said at a news conference with Iowa pastors who murmured, ''Amen.''
''I wasn't there when he did it, so how he did it, I don't know,'' Huckabee said.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Huckabee, Religion]
November 29, 2007
 Jerry Falwell Jr. Endorses Mike Huckabee for President
FOX News
LYNCHBURG, Va. — GOP dark horse Mike Huckabee earned the endorsement Wednesday of Jerry Falwell Jr. bringing a prominent Christian conservative into his corner as his popularity surges in the tightening Republican race.
Falwell, chancellor of Liberty University and son of the late televangelist, gave the endorsement in Lynchburg, Va., saying his father, who founded the Moral Majority, "supported Governor Huckabee before he was number two."
The former Arkansas governor and Baptist pastor said Wednesday that prayer has played a big role in his recent polling success.
"It defies all explanation, confounds the pundits and I'm enjoying every minute of them trying to figure it out, and until they look at it (as) just experience beyond human they'll never figure out and that's honestly why it's happening," said Huckabee, who appeared with Falwell.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Huckabee]
November 16, 2007
 Evangelical flocks on their own at the polls
LA Times
Conservative Christian leaders are increasingly reluctant to get political, leaving a key Republican voting bloc divided. The trend may help Giuliani but hurt the GOP in the long term.
COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. -- A fundamental shift is transforming the religious right, long a force in presidential politics, as aging evangelical leaders split on the 2008 race and a new generation of pastors turns away from politics altogether.
The result, in the short term, could be a boost for the centrist candidacy of former New York City Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, whose messy personal life and support for gay rights and legal abortion have not produced the unified opposition from Christian conservatives that many anticipated.
Over the longer term, the distancing of religious leaders from politics could prove even more consequential, denying the GOP one of the essential building blocks it has used to capture the White House in five of the last seven presidential races.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion]
November 10, 2007
 Dobson Says No Endorsement Imminent
Associated Press via NYT
In a week that saw conservative Christian leaders scatter their endorsements across the Republican presidential field comes one notable non-endorsement.
Focus on the Family founder James Dobson, in a radio broadcast taped Friday and to be aired Monday, said he isn't close to endorsing a candidate and if he does it likely will come ''later in the campaign.''
Dobson denied print and Internet reports quoting unnamed sources as saying he was about to endorse former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, a favorite of social conservatives who has struggled to win support from the movement's leaders.
''I know Mike Huckabee personally,'' Dobson said. ''I like him. We talk on the phone. I don't mean to be disparaging to him at all.''
Permalink [Category: Christian Right]
November 09, 2007
 GOP candidates trumpet Christian backers
The Politico
Two leading GOP candidates won endorsements from big name Christian leaders Wednesday, injecting some new intrigue into the Republican race.
Pat Robertson, the nation’s best-known televangelist, offered his blessing to New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), a fairly hot commodity since he dropped out of the race last month, gave his support for Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).
Endorsements don't win elections, but they are a pretty big deal for both candidates. Guiliani, a pro-choice candidate, needs the credibility with Christian voters that can come with the backing of Robertson and other well-known religious leaders. McCain, struggling to rebound, needs the same.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right]
November 08, 2007
 Welcome to the 700 Club, Rudy
Salon (sub)
Pat Robertson's endorsement of Rudy Giuliani Wednesday morning may have triggered an earthquake in national political circles, but here in the most socially conservative of the early primary states, there were only faint tremors on the Richter scale. In fact, the early evening local newscasts did not even mention the Pat-and-Rudy odd-coupling, even though Giuliani had swooped into the area for a cameo appearance late afternoon at his state headquarters.
A quick canvas of South Carolina political experts produced the tentative conclusion that Robertson's blessing will only register at the margins, if at all. "The Christian right is always locally autonomous, and they don't take direction from their presumed leaders. I don't think this will signal a mass stampede by the evangelicals to Giuliani," said Danielle Vinson, a political science professor at Furman University.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Giuliani Archive]
November 07, 2007
 Analysis: Right Splinters on GOP Field
Associated Press via NYT
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The splintering of prominent Christian conservatives over the Republican presidential contenders reflects a schism -- between the dogma of God, guns and gays and the desire to beat Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Months of disagreement within this important GOP voting bloc culminated this week in a flurry of endorsements:
Televangelist Pat Robertson is backing Rudy Giuliani. Conservative Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas is supporting fellow Sen. John McCain of Arizona. Moral Majority co-founder Paul Weyrich is going for Mitt Romney.
All the candidates are flawed in the eyes of the Christian right, which is why some evangelical leaders are holding out and might favor a third-party candidate.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Conservatives]
 Brownback to Endorse McCain
Associated Press via NYT
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) -- Sam Brownback, a Kansas conservative and favorite of evangelical Christians, will endorse his former Republican presidential rival John McCain, an advisory from McCain's campaign said Wednesday.
The nod could provide a much-needed boost, particularly in Iowa, for the Arizona senator and one-time presumed GOP front-runner whose bid faltered and who now is looking for a comeback.
Brownback will announce his support for McCain later Wednesday in Dubuque, Iowa, and then travel with the candidate to campaign in two other cities in the state, the McCain campaign advisory said.
It's uncertain how much weight the Brownback's backing will carry; the Kansas senator dropped out of the race last month with little money and little support. While he is a favorite of religious conservatives, he failed to persuade them to embrace him as the GOP's consensus conservative candidate. He spent months emphasizing his rock-solid opposition to abortion, gay marriage and other issues important to the party's right flank, but left the race ranking low in national polls and state surveys.
Permalink [Category: Brownback, Christian Right, McCain Archive]
 Pat Robertson Backs Giuliani
Associated Press via NYT
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pat Robertson, a prominent Christian leader and social conservative, endorsed Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani on Wednesday.
''It is my pleasure to announce my support for America's Mayor, Rudy Giuliani, a proven leader who is not afraid of what lies ahead and who will cast a hopeful vision for all Americans,'' Robertson said in a statement issued by the Giuliani campaign.
The former New York mayor backs abortion rights and gay rights, positions that put him in conflict with GOP orthodoxy, and has been trying to persuade cultural conservatives to overlook their differences with him on those issues.
Robertson made no mention of the differences on social conservative issues in the statement.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Giuliani Archive]
November 06, 2007
 Romney Gets Major Backer on the Right
The New York Times (register)
Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign announced yesterday an endorsement from the man whom some consider the father of the religious right, Paul M. Weyrich, chairman of the Free Congress Foundation and a founder of the Moral Majority.
Mr. Weyrich, who also founded the Heritage Foundation, had been critical of talk this year among Christian conservative leaders about possibly bolting the Republican Party and backing a third-party candidate if Rudolph W. Giuliani, a supporter of abortion rights, is the nominee.
Now it appears that Mr. Weyrich is backing up that criticism with action, lining up behind Mr. Romney, despite questions many Christian conservatives continue to harbor about the candidate’s relatively recent conversion to opponent of abortion from supporter of abortion rights
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion, Romney Archive]
November 01, 2007
 Poll: Over Half of GOP Evangelicals Considering Third-Party Candidate
FOX News
WASHINGTON — More than half of white evangelical Republicans would consider voting for a conservative third-party candidate should the 2008 presidential race pit Hillary Rodham Clinton against Rudy Giuliani, a poll said Wednesday.
The finding, in a survey by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center, was the latest reading of discontent among one of the GOP's cornerstone voting blocs. Giuliani, the leading Republican contender in most national polls, is a former New York mayor whose views on abortion, gays and guns are considered too moderate by many conservatives.
According to the poll, 55 percent of white evangelical Republicans said they would consider a conservative who ran as a third-party candidate. Forty-two percent said they would not.
Evangelicals comprise 34 percent of GOP and Republican-leaning voters, according to Pew. They are divided about evenly among Giuliani, Fred Thompson and Sen. John McCain of Arizona.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Polls, Religion]
October 29, 2007
 Huckabee stirs up third-party fear
The Washington Times
A bitter fight is taking place behind the scenes over Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee.
Influential conservatives are clashing over whether Mr. Huckabee is capable of keeping evangelicals from fleeing the GOP to form a third party or if he's too liberal fiscally for the Republican electorate.
The battle is bubbling into the public arena, fueled by fears that a three-way race could hand the presidency to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton or another Democrat, and by murmurs of Mr. Huckabee as a vice-presidential candidate on the party's ticket.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Huckabee, Religion]
 The Evangelical Crackup
The New York Times (register)
The hundred-foot white cross atop the Immanuel Baptist Church in downtown Wichita, Kan., casts a shadow over a neighborhood of payday lenders, pawnbrokers and pornographic video stores. To its parishioners, this has long been the front line of the culture war. Immanuel has stood for Southern Baptist traditionalism for more than half a century. Until recently, its pastor, Terry Fox, was the Jerry Falwell of the Sunflower State — the public face of the conservative Christian political movement in a place where that made him a very big deal.
With flushed red cheeks and a pudgy, dimpled chin, Fox roared down from Immanuel’s pulpit about the wickedness of abortion, evolution and homosexuality. He mobilized hundreds of Kansas pastors to push through a state constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, helping to unseat a handful of legislators in the process. His Sunday-morning services reached tens of thousands of listeners on regional cable television, and on Sunday nights he was a host of a talk-radio program, “Answering the Call.” Major national conservative Christian groups like Focus on the Family lauded his work, and the Southern Baptist Convention named him chairman of its North American Mission Board.
For years, Fox flaunted his allegiance to the Republican Party, urging fellow pastors to make the same “confession” and calling them “sissies” if they didn’t. “We are the religious right,” he liked to say. “One, we are religious. Two, we are right.”
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion]
October 23, 2007
 Romney Finds Christian Support in S.C.
Associated Press via NYT
GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) -- Mitt Romney's presidential campaign has been embraced in a most unlikely place: at Bob Jones University, the influential Christian college that teaches that his Mormon church is a cult.
In early-voting South Carolina, Romney has picked up support among the evangelicals and social conservatives who are a political force.
Last week, Romney won the endorsements of Bob Jones III and Robert Taylor, the founder's grandson and a top dean respectively here at Bob Jones University.
He also gained the backing of Don Wilton, the immediate past president of the South Carolina Baptist Convention and pastor of a nearby megachurch, as well as Dr. John Willke, a founder and past president of the National Right to Life Committee.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Romney Archive, South Carolina Primary]
October 22, 2007
 For Giuliani, chasm may be too wide
The LA Times
As evangelicals talk of boycotting the GOP, the former New York City mayor seeks to assure conservatives that he's one of them.
WASHINGTON — With some leading social conservatives threatening to boycott the Republican Party if Rudolph W. Giuliani wins the presidential nomination, the former New York City mayor sought Saturday to assure activists in this crucial GOP voting bloc that they have "absolutely nothing to fear from me."
Giuliani told more than 2,000 evangelical activists that despite his support for abortion rights and other liberal views, Christians would have a voice in his administration, and that, though he has not always been comfortable discussing it in public, faith "is at the core of who I am."
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Giuliani Archive]
October 19, 2007
 Evangelicals Lukewarm Toward GOP Field
The Washington Post
For months, Republican presidential candidates such as Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee and John McCain have courted evangelical Christians, meeting with religious leaders throughout the Midwest and the South.
Today, thousands of Christian conservatives will gather in Washington to confront the fact that none of the candidates has won them over.
For Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, and former senator Fred D. Thompson (Tenn.), the conference will be an opportunity to do what months of private meetings have failed to accomplish: become the consensus candidate for the evangelical movement, a key constituency of the Republican Party.
"At the moment, there's nothing but confusion every place I go," said Chuck Colson, who runs the Prison Fellowship, a national Christian ministry. "They lament the fact that there's no one candidate out there around whom evangelicals and conservative Catholics can sort of coalesce around and get excited about."
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion]
October 16, 2007
 Gingerly, Romney Seeks Ties to Christian Right
The New York Times (register)
He has invoked the Rev. Rick Warren, a popular evangelical author and megachurch pastor. He has quoted Scripture and alluded to the Gideon Bible as favorite late-night reading. And he has cited his belief in Jesus Christ as his personal “savior.”
The Rev. Rick Warren is often quoted by Mitt Romney while speaking to conservative Christian groups.
As Mitt Romney has had to grapple with suspicions about his Mormon religion during his presidential run, he has tried in various ways to signal his kinship with evangelical Christians, who represent a crucial constituency of the Republican base but consider his religious beliefs to be heretical.
He faces a delicate task in trying to stake out common ground with conservative Christians, while not running afoul of deeply rooted evangelical sensitivities about any blurring of distinctions between Mormonism and conventional Protestantism.
“He has to be very cautious,” said Oran P. Smith, president of the Palmetto Family Council, a conservative Christian group in South Carolina. “When he actually says things that make Mormonism sound like orthodox Christianity, I think that’s where he runs into a lot of trouble.”
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion, Romney Archive]
October 12, 2007
 GOP rift sends Christian right adrift
The Politico
The Republican Party definitely has something the Democratic Party lacks: a deep ideological rift.
This rift has been hidden in plain sight ever since Rudy Giuliani started topping the national polls for the Republican nomination for president.
Giuliani is pro-choice in a party that has long been pro-life.
And about 10 days ago, about 50 Christian conservative leaders met behind closed doors in Salt Lake City to discuss what they would do if Giuliani gets the Republican nod.
Their decision? They would bolt the party.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Election Process Archive, Religion]
October 11, 2007
 Mitt Romney Gets a Boost from an Evangelical Supporter
The New York Times (register)
In a bid to derail Rudolph W. Giuliani’s surge in the polls and rally evangelical voters, an influential evangelical public relations executive wrote to some 150 top conservative Christian leaders warning of the prospect of a Giuliani or Hillary Rodham Clinton administration and prodding them to rally instead around Mitt Romney.
Mark DeMoss, a publicist whose clients include the Rev. Franklin Graham, penned a five-page letter, urging evangelical leaders to “galvanize support around Mitt Romney, so Mr. Giuliani isn’t the unintended beneficiary of our divided support among several candidates.” Or, “worse yet,” he warned, “so we don’t abdicate the presidency (and the future of the Supreme Court) over to Hillary Clinton.”
In an interview, Mr. DeMoss, who is a Romney supporter but is not paid by the campaign, said he sensed an opening for Mr. Romney at this point in the race, with Fred D. Thompson garnering lackluster reviews on the campaign trail and lesser-known candidates like Mike Huckabee continuing to struggle with fund-raising.
“A lot of things that a lot of conservatives have either been hoping for, or waiting for, are clearly not panning out,” he said.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion]
October 05, 2007
 Religious right aims 'to hurt' GOP
The Washington Times
Religious conservative leaders say they don't expect to win if they carry through with preparations to run their own presidential candidate next year.
Instead, their goal would be to hurt the Republicans if Rudolph W. Giuliani becomes the Republican Party's standard-bearer.
"The only reason to go third party is to hurt another party, as Ross Perot did and Ralph Nader did," American Family Association (AFA) Chairman Donald Wildmon told The Washington Times.
Mr. Perot's populist presidential campaigns in 1992 and 1996 were seen as mostly hurting the Republicans, while Mr. Nader's 2000 Green Party candidacy was widely blamed for helping defeat Democrat Al Gore.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Conservatives, Religion]
October 04, 2007
 Giuliani Tries to Reassure Religious Conservatives
The New York Times (register)
SALEM, N.H., Oct. 3 — Facing a revolt from some Christian conservative leaders over his stance on abortion, Rudolph W. Giuliani sought to reassure religious voters that he respected their faith but in turn asked them to respect his candor, even if they disagreed with him.
During a campaign swing across New Hampshire, only days after one prominent Christian conservative group threatened to back a third-party candidate if Mr. Giuliani wins the Republican presidential nomination, Mr. Giuliani faced a barrage of questions about how he can appeal to conservative Christian voters.
Mr. Giuliani also received an indication of possible hostility from some Roman Catholic leaders when an archbishop from St. Louis denounced his stance favoring abortion rights, and said he would withhold communion from Mr. Giuliani, a Roman Catholic. The archbishop was the second church leader to criticize Mr. Giuliani for his abortion views.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Conservatives, Giuliani Archive, Religion]
October 01, 2007
 Giuliani Inspires Threat of a Third-Party Run
The New York Times (register)
WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 — Alarmed at the possibility that the Republican Party might pick Rudolph W. Giuliani as its presidential nominee despite his support for abortion rights, a coalition of influential Christian conservatives is threatening to back a third-party candidate.
The threat emerged from a group that broke away for separate discussions at a meeting Saturday in Salt Lake City of the Council for National Policy, a secretive conservative networking group. Participants said the smaller group included James C. Dobson of Focus on the Family, who is perhaps its most influential member; Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council; Richard A. Viguerie, the direct-mail pioneer; and dozens of other politically oriented conservative Christians.
Almost everyone present at the smaller group’s meeting expressed support for a written resolution stating that “if the Republican Party nominates a pro-abortion candidate we will consider running a third-party candidate,” participants said.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Conservatives, Giuliani Archive, Reproductive Rights, Third Parties]
 Christian right is split over GOP field
The LA Times
WASHINGTON -- Barely three months before voting for presidential candidates begins, the religious right has yet to unite behind a Republican, heightening concerns among evangelical leaders that social liberal Rudolph W. Giuliani will capture the party's nomination.
The splintering of religious conservatives, if it endures, would ease the way for New York's former mayor to emerge as the party's first nominee to explicitly support abortion rights since the Supreme Court legalized the procedure in 1973.
But the lack of a consensus choice for president is only part of the troubles facing conservative evangelicals, a powerful force within the GOP for more than a generation.
"It's low tide right now for our movement," said Tim Wildmon, president of the American Family Assn.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Conservatives, Religion]
September 23, 2007
 Christian right not losing the faith
The Washington Times
BRANDON, Fla. (AP) — Christian conservatives are weary. Their movement has lost iconic leaders, and some say the 2008 Republican presidential field is uninspiring. But they may have found hope in a trailer on the campus of Bell Shoals Baptist Church.
There, in Annex Room No. 3, Ruth Klingman nods as a leader in Florida's pro-family movement describes how same-sex "marriage" would open the door to other "aberrant forms of marriage."
Yes, Miss Klingman says afterward, she will do her part to pass a constitutional amendment cementing marriage as a union between one man and one woman in this presidential swing state.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right]
September 21, 2007
 Thompson Shrugs Off Dobson Criticism
Associated Press via NYT
DALLAS (AP) -- Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson on Thursday shrugged off harsh criticism from James Dobson, saying he has friends who likely know the influential Christian leader and they hold him in high regard.
In a private e-mail obtained by The Associated Press, Dobson accuses the former Tennessee senator and actor of being weak on the campaign trail and wrong on issues dear to social conservatives.
''Isn't Thompson the candidate who is opposed to a Constitutional amendment to protect marriage, believes there should be 50 different definitions of marriage in the U.S., favors McCain-Feingold, won't talk at all about what he believes, and can't speak his way out of a paper bag on the campaign trail?'' Dobson wrote.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion, Thompson Fred]
September 20, 2007
 Evangelical Leader Pans Thompson
Associated Press via NYT
DENVER (AP) -- James Dobson, one of the nation's most politically influential evangelical Christians, made it clear in a message to friends this week he will not support Republican presidential hopeful Fred Thompson.
In a private e-mail obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press, Dobson accuses the former Tennessee senator and actor of being weak on the campaign trail and wrong on issues dear to social conservatives.
''Isn't Thompson the candidate who is opposed to a Constitutional amendment to protect marriage, believes there should be 50 different definitions of marriage in the U.S., favors McCain-Feingold, won't talk at all about what he believes, and can't speak his way out of a paper bag on the campaign trail?'' Dobson wrote.
''He has no passion, no zeal, and no apparent 'want to.' And yet he is apparently the Great Hope that burns in the breasts of many conservative Christians? Well, not for me, my brothers. Not for me!''
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion, Thompson Fred]
September 10, 2007
 Evangelicals Hesitant About Thompson
Associated Press via NYT
Prominent evangelical leaders who spent the summer hoping Fred Thompson would emerge as their favored Republican presidential contender are having doubts as he begins his long-teased campaign.
For social conservatives dissatisfied with other GOP choices, the ''Law & Order'' actor and former Tennessee senator represents a Ronald Reagan-like figure, someone they hope will agree with them on issues and stands a chance of winning.
But Thompson's less-than-clear stance on a federal gay marriage amendment and his delay in entering the race are partly responsible for a sudden shyness among leading evangelicals.
''A month or two ago, I sensed there was some urgency for people to make a move and find a candidate,'' said Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, a Washington-based conservative Christian group. ''Right now, I think people are stepping back a little and watching. The field is still very fluid.''
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion, Thompson Fred]
September 01, 2007
 Evangelicals Disappointed, Political Faith Shaken
ABC News
As the Republican party reels from another scandal involving sex, several evangelical leaders say they're worried about losing their political clout as the faithful become disillusioned with the immoral behavior of a few hypocritical lawmakers.
It is easy for Republican candidates to take the evangelical community for granted, but it's leaders say their support is not guaranted. Several expressed disappointment with individual lawmakers and concern about the party's prospects for the 2008 presidential election.
The list of shamed lawmakers includes Idaho Sen. Larry Craig, recently arrested for allegedly soliciting sex in a men's restroom; Louisiana Sen. David Vitter, who confessed to being a client of the "D.C. Madam"; and former Florida Rep. Mark Foley, who exchanged lewd e-mails and instant messages with teenage boys in the congressional page program. The scandal involving GOP lobbyist Jack Abramoff and the ethical questions currently surrounding Republican Senator Ted Stevens only add to the problems.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right]
July 08, 2007
 Evangelicals See Dilemmas in G.O.P. Field
The New York Times (register)
Unlike in the 2000 presidential campaign, when George W. Bush was able to overcome early doubts among religious conservatives by speaking the language of personal faith, the three most prominent Republican candidates, Rudolph W. Giuliani, Senator John McCain and Mitt Romney, are continuing to have difficulty winning over this crucial constituency in the Republican base.
The calculus at this point for social conservative voters, who represent more than 60 percent of Republican caucus goers here in Iowa, is replete with tradeoffs over who best adheres to their values and who is ultimately electable next year. Interviews with more than 40 evangelicals recently across Iowa at campaign events, churches and over the telephone found that many feared Mr. Giuliani might win the nomination even though he supported abortion rights. But they are wrestling with whether Mr. Romney’s recent conversion to opposing abortion is genuine, and they wonder how much to trust Mr. McCain, who has harshly criticized the religious right in the past.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Election Process Archive, Religion]
June 27, 2007
 Robertson thinks Rudy heaven-sent
The New York Daily News
VIRGINIA BEACH - Conservative televangelist Pat Robertson praised the pro-choice, pro-gay rights Rudy Giuliani to the rafters yesterday - stopping just short of giving the former mayor his blessing for the presidency.
"This is supposed to be a nonpolitical thing," Robertson said in introducing Giuliani at a lecture series at the preacher's Regent University here. "But we would be remiss to forget the fact that he seems to be running for President."
"And in point of fact," added Robertson, a co-founder of the powerful Christian Coalition, "he may one day become not New York's mayor, but America's leader. So it's a great pleasure to welcome a dear friend and a great leader."
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Giuliani Archive]
June 26, 2007
 Rudy set to woo Pat U.
The New York Daily News
He'll make case to Robertson and Christian Coalition
Talk about an unusual civil union between two men - Rudy Giuliani, the pro-choice, pro-gay rights former mayor, is set to huddle tomorrow with Pat Robertson, the conservative Christian Coalition founder and televangelist.
The Republican presidential hopeful is due to give a speech at the preacher's Regent University in Virginia, marking one of the most explicit appeals to date by Giuliani to fundamentalist Christian voters.
It's a tall order for the thrice-married Giuliani, who will likely try to skirt his liberal views on abortion and other social issues and dwell instead on his tax-cutting, tough-onterror prescriptions for America, aides said.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Giuliani Archive]
June 25, 2007
 Obama Says Some Have 'Hijacked' Faith
Associated Press via NYT
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -- Sen. Barack Obama told a church convention Saturday that some right-wing evangelical leaders have exploited and politicized religious beliefs in an effort to sow division.
''Somehow, somewhere along the way, faith stopped being used to bring us together and faith started being used to drive us apart,'' the Democratic presidential candidate said in a 30-minute speech before the national meeting of the United Church of Christ.
''Faith got hijacked, partly because of the so-called leaders of the Christian Right, all too eager to exploit what divides us,'' the Illinois senator said.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Obama Archive, Religion]
June 22, 2007
 Southern Baptist Leader: Evangelicals Unlikely to Vote for Romney
FOX News
Evangelicals are unlikely to vote for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney because the former Massachusetts governor's Mormon faith claims to be the only true Christian church, a Southern Baptist leader says.
"I have a very difficult time with the perspective [the Mormon church holds] that, 'we are the true expression of Christianity and all other forms of it are wrong and false and apostasy and heresy,'" says R. Philip Roberts, president of Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Religion, Romney Archive]
June 13, 2007
 Atypical Evangelical
The Washington Post
The presidential candidate was talking about the threat of outsourcing and the immorality of corporate chief executives getting huge bonuses while workers' pension plans go bust.
"When CEOs are making 500 times the average wage of their worker, how can you justify that?" he asked. "I think a president ought to call out companies . . . in which the CEO leads his company into bankruptcy . . . and gets a $100 million bonus while the workers down below end up losing their jobs and have worked 20 and 30 years for pensions and they're gone. . . . That's immoral. . . . And that's not free enterprise; that's theft."
Standard presidential primary fare, perhaps, except that the candidate speaking was a Republican, and a conservative Christian one at that: former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee. A long shot for his party's nomination, certainly, yet Huckabee, a Baptist minister, is not the cartoon Christian conservative of popular imagining.
Permalink [Category: Christian Right, Huckabee]
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