From Deseret News archives:
LDS support is mixed blessing for Romney's campaign
Church members cohesive, but some worry about bias
"Nearly every seat was filled. Just about everybody that's anybody was there," said Grant Ipsen, a former Idaho state legislator. "I don't think I'd ever attended another fund-raiser for a federal candidate in Idaho."
There was no great mystery why Romney was in town. The former Massachusetts governor is LDS, as are about one-quarter of Idaho residents, including Ipsen and many others who turned out for the lunchtime event. The fund-raiser was bracketed by two others in the Mountain West: one in Las Vegas and another outside Phoenix. At both of those events, members of the church made up at least half the crowd, organizers said. Altogether, the two-day swing brought in well over $1 million for Romney.
"When Mormons get mobilized, they're like dry kindling. You drop a match and get impressive results quickly," said University of Notre Dame political scientist David Campbell, who is LDS. "It's almost a unique group in the way in which it's organized at the local level and the channels through which mobilization can occur."
But the intensity of this support has a potential downside as Romney tries to establish an identity separate from a religion still regarded warily by many Americans a quarter of whom, polls suggest, do not want a Mormon president.
Romney's fellow Mormons also find themselves in a bind. In dozens of interviews, church members across the country said they are excited by Romney's candidacy and eager to do what they can for him, just like members of other religious or ethnic groups with favorite-son candidates. Yet they are also hesitant to state their support too strongly, to avoid provoking anti-Mormon bias or violating church rules against politicking inside church walls.
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