'Excommunicated' by GOP, Bob Bennett says Romney, religion, economy make 2012 election unique
Editor's note: Click here to view the complete "At the Crossroads, Again" conference.
Sharing his "experiences of a practical politician, forcibly retired," former Sen. Robert Bennett told an interfaith conference of Mormons and Protestants in Washington, D.C., that the 2012 election is proving to be one unlike any in his lifetime, and Gov. Mitt Romney's religion is a key part of that.
Bennett presided over a discussion on religion and American political culture on the second and final day of a gathering of the Mormon Chapter of the Foundation for Religious Diplomacy and the Wesley Theological Seminary, titled "At the Crossroads, Again: Mormon and Protestant Encounters in the 19th and 21st Centuries."
Coming a few minutes late because of a cold, Bennett joined Wesley Professor Shaun Casey and Utah Valley University President Matthew Holland. Bennett spoke candidly and criticized more extreme parts of his party, noting, "I have no need to worry about them because they've already excommunicated me from the party."
Given that the divisive Republican primary could lead to no nominee claiming victory at the national party convention — which nowadays typically serves as "nothing but a coronation" — President Obama will have an "easy victory" over whichever GOP candidate manages to be the last man standing, Bennett predicted.
But given the current bad economic climate, there's no historical precedent for Obama winning re-election, he continued.
"So I can make the case that no one will win," Bennett said to great laughter. "But obviously someone will."
And religion plays an unfortunate part of this. Bennett revealed that a political contact of his told him, "If Mitt Romney were Presbyterian, he would be the Republican nominee."
But religious prejudice is something that hardly confronts Mormons alone. From a soon-to-be-released study, Holland revealed that while 29 percent of Americans would not vote for a Mormon candidate for president, 27 percent likewise said they would not vote for an evangelical. Among Democrats, 47 percent said they would not vote for a Mormon, compared to 23 percent for Republicans.
As with most studies of this kind, the religions that face the harshest prejudice are Muslims (43 percent oppose) and atheists (40 percent oppose).
One political tactic some Republicans are currently using against the president is accusing him of a "war on religion," Casey said, noting that Romney avoids it.
"The biggest loser will be the LDS Church, independent of the political outcome," Casey said, noting it would be ironic for a member of a "maligned, minority religion" to pick up a weapon that had been used so frequently against him.
Given what a religious country America is, faith naturally shapes our politics, unlike in Europe, Holland observed, though that could change as increasing numbers of Americans continue to identify themselves as religiously unaffiliated.
While most religious people see that increase as a negative, it's actually an opportunity, Casey said, for evangelizing faiths to share their message with people of religious background but no active religious participation.
But politics was not the only topic of conversation at the interfaith conference. Vanderbilt University Professor Kathleen Flake and Southern Methodist University Professor Elaine Heath discussed the theological significance of gender in Mormonism and Protestantism.
Author of "The Gospel According to 'Twilight,'" Heath said she had a "conflicted response" to the popular series of novels by LDS author Stephenie Meyer. While the books depicts stark gender stereotypes and normative violence against women, they also offer positive Christian messages about chastity and a unity of different races, Heath said.
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I think it was disgraceful the way Bob Bennett was treated.
Bennett was a better senator than Hatch. Lee is a kook. We need someone who will work with the other party, not ridicule and villify themsich as Lee and Hatch. When have you ever heard President Obama say about a republican, that they hate this More..
Please, there is no war on religion. What it is is two things. First, religions continue their wars with each other. Mormons getting into the same political bed with Southern Baptists is a bad, bad idea. Then there is Santorum, who states his More..