November 15, 2007

Blackwell on Evangelicals and Endorsements

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketThe man who would have been the 45th or 46th President of the United States had the GOP’s fortunes faired better in ’06 – former Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell – wrote on Evangelicalism and endorsements today for The N.Y. Sun.

Here’s a snippet:

For months, the political chattering class has delighted in what they perceive as the crumbling of the powerful social conservative coalition. The New York Times, always looking to denigrate social conservatives, has reported on “The Evangelical Crackup” and the “deep divide in the Christian conservative movement.”

Some conservatives even have echoed the Times’ premise. They were conservatives, but they were not evangelical Christian conservatives. Yet, they waxed eloquent about the thinking of conservative Christians, some going as far as saying that evangelicals had finally “grown up” or “matured” in their judgment. Such statements reek of condescension.

They don’t seem to understand the movement or its leaders. And they shouldn’t look to the New York Times for insight.

Social conservatives are united on issues of life, the Supreme Court, marriage, and Second Amendment freedoms. But, the movement’s leaders are independent thinkers who are often slow to rally around a single political standard-bearer. They like to kick the tires.

In the GOP presidential primary, social conservatives are already casting a deep footprint.

Four of the movement’s leaders recently endorsed their first choice for the Republican nomination. Each picked a different candidate. Each endorsement was newsworthy. And each provided a principled rationale for their decision. All four endorsements and their news coverage demonstrated the sustained influence and importance of social conservatives in the GOP.

The biggest headline was of course Reverend Pat Robertson endorsing Rudy Giuliani. It’s also the most misunderstood news story last week.

Almost immediately, the press was panning the endorsement as a sell-out. That’s ridiculous. Mr. Robertson is not selling out. He just happens to have a J.D. from Yale Law School, so he knows what Mr. Giuliani’s commitment to appointing strict constructionists to the Supreme Court means. The fact that Ted Olson, an unimpeachable legal conservative, is Mr. Giuliani’s closest advisor on judicial matters seals the deal for many as to the kind of Supreme Court he would create.

There were even pundits saying that Mr. Robertson was putting fighting terrorists ahead of ending abortion. Nonsense. Yes, he places great emphasis on winning the war against the global network of terrorists. But, he also knows Mr. Giuliani would appoint conservative judges and believes he has the best chance to beat Hillary Clinton. Therefore, he believes supporting Mr. Giuliani gives conservatives the best chance of overturning Roe v. Wade. He didn’t drop abortion as an issue; he thinks this gives us the best chance on the issue, and is acting on principle.

So the story here is not a fractured coalition or evangelical leaders who have “sold-out.” Although that’s what many in the press would like you to think.

Instead, the true story is that men, acting in accordance with their principles, can come to different conclusions. It shows how a principled Yale Law School graduate can come to one conclusion, while a principled public servant in the Senate can come to another, while two major conservative leaders can come to two other conclusions. And, they did it all at the same time.

These leaders are all men of principle. Each stuck with his principles, and did what he thought was right. And each respects the others’ decisions.

Now that’s quite a story. It’s the kind of story that should lead to a productive public discussion of how people can share many of the same principles yet can come to different conclusions. What also should be discussed is how their decisions will affect other people who have yet to make one. It means this race is still wide-open. It also means social conservatives matter.

To paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of the movement’s death have been greatly exaggerated.

The main thing to take away in all of this is that fact although each top-tier candidate has their flaws in the realm of social conservativism, none of them are any way challenging evangelical’s beliefs, their place in the party, or seeking to alter Republican core values on Life.

This, coupled with changing priorities in the issues that Social Conservatives find most important, is why Rudy Giuliani remains of top of the GOP field.

by @ 3:31 pm. Filed under Endorsements, Rudy Giuliani
Trackback URL for this post:
http://race42012.com/2007/11/15/blackwell-on-evangelicalism-and-endorsements/trackback/

10 Responses to “Blackwell on Evangelicals and Endorsements”

  1. Peter Says:

    “although each top-tier candidate has their flaws in the realm of social conservativism, none of them are any way challenging evangelical’s beliefs, their place in the party, or seeking to alter Republican core values on Life.”

    Translation: Who cares about social issues! :)

  2. Nathan Says:

    A lot of people care about social issues. That’s why it’s huge news every time a known social conservative makes a public endorsement. The fact that social conservatives aren’t united behind one candidate doesn’t mean that nobody cares about issues. It’s quite the opposite.

  3. Conservative Gladiator Says:

    The dirty little secret (not really a secret) amongst the Evangelicals is that they dislike Mormons. If Romney wasn’t a Mormon this discussion would be worth reading. Anything in the context of Evangelicals in this election is tainted.

  4. JA Pruce Says:

    Had Republicans faired better in 06, I would have loved to have seen a GOP ticket of JC Watts/Ken Blackwell or JC Watts/Michael Steele — I think that it could’ve really shaken up the Red-Blue divide for generations.

  5. MetroRepublican Says:

    JA Pruce, nice, but an ex House member from awhile ago is not going to top any ticket.

  6. MetroRepublican Says:

    In any political context. Well, maybe if he tracked down Osama personally and carried his head down the Washington Mall.

  7. Dave Says:

    This discussion will become crucial when the race narrows to 2 candidates, at which time this bloc will gravitate to the most viable candidate opposing Giuliani. So, for example, the NRLC is only temporarily supporting Fred, if he doesn’t win any early primaries.

  8. Grant Gormley Says:

    Why doesn’t Mitt quit being a mormon–it would help him to flip on that.

  9. Eric Says:

    Huckabee should pick Blackwell as a running mate!

    Huckabee/Blackwell 2008

  10. Tano Says:

    This is pretty funny stuff.

    Translation:

    The movement is hopelessly fractured.
    Therefore we are relevant.

State of the Race


Obama Approval


Support R4'12

Meta

Recent Posts

Buy This Book

Categories

Archives

Search

Blogroll

Site Syndication

Main