Religious values will play role in presidential election
Mitt Romney visits St. Paul's Lutheran Church while campaigning in Berlin, N.H.
Charles Krupa, Associated Press
What role will religion play in the 2012 elections? According to voters, not a big one.
A recent Pew Research Center poll revealed that most Americans are comfortable with what they know about the candidates' faith and that their votes will have little to do with the nominees' religion. In fact, a majority of the electorate is significantly more interested in Mitt Romney's tax returns and gubernatorial record than in his beliefs.
Two-thirds of those surveyed said religion's influence on the way they vote is declining, which may explain how the Republican Party, whose platform in recent years has reflected white evangelical priorities, could have nominated a Mormon and a Roman Catholic to run for the White House.
But is the Romney/Ryan ticket a sign that religion no longer matters or that religious identity — even on the right — is evolving along post-denominational lines? Not really.
Galvanized by a born-again Southern Baptist, a peanut farmer from rural Georgia, the white evangelical voting bloc emerged as a key factor in the 1976 election of Democrat Jimmy Carter. But when Carter proved too liberal for their tastes, many switched parties to support Ronald Reagan in 1980.
Reagan, unlike Carter, did not use the term "born again," but Christians understood that he was raised in a pious home and had a come-to-Jesus experience in the late 1960s. More important, and as his advisers made sure they knew, his social, economic and political positions squared with theirs and were justified along the same religious lines.
The Hollywood hero was a die-hard anti-communist and proponent of a free-market economy who believed those values reflected God's plan for America. Even as the religious right complained that Reagan wasn't doing enough to end abortion and return prayer to public schools, they applauded his tough stance against the Kremlin, unions and "welfare queens."
Reagan helped teach conservative evangelicals to look beyond outward trappings and plumb a politician's heart. Over the next 30 years, Republican candidates, whether Episcopalian, Methodist or Baptist, came to be judged more by whether their policies reflected faith-based principles than by where and when they went to church.
They were expected to hold pro-life, pro-prayer and pro-heterosexual family positions. But more significant, given American foreign policy and domestic priorities, they were expected to support an international presence (once opposed to communism but now standing against "political Islam"), a diminished federal government and a vigorous free-market economy.
When he founded the Moral Majority more than 30 years ago, Jerry Falwell hoped to unite white evangelicals, Roman Catholics and Orthodox Jews around all these positions.
But he began by focusing more narrowly on social issues, citing all three religions' shared antipathy for "abortion on demand," gay rights and other alleged threats to the nuclear family.
His bold vision defied the long-standing mutual distrust among religions, and it was not clear in the beginning whether the approach could succeed. Could anti-Semitism and anti-Catholicism be put aside? Could evangelical soul-saving take a back seat to disciplined vote-getting? Could a joint crusade to save "unborn life" trump decades of mutual suspicion?
As it turned out, the answer to those questions was yes. Falwell's scheme reinvigorated the Republican Party, and its subsequently successful presidential candidates have been Protestants whose religious commitments included conservative positions on domestic and foreign policy. In 2008, a distrust of Mormons on the part of some Republicans — many evangelicals do not consider Mormons to be Christian — helped derail Romney's candidacy.
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Religion is doing incredible harm to our political process. I am not voting for preacher in chief. Whatever their relationship with god, it's personal.
It's a good trend for voters to prefer a candidate based on actual moral standards than the specific name of the church from whom he learned them.
That also makes it a difficult choice for Americans like me who want leaders with More..
If Mitt Romney actually had any religious, moral values, he wouldn't have put thousands of people out of work just to enrich himself and his friends.
If religion plays a role in this election, Romney doesn't stand a chance.