Religion
Related: About this forumLessons from Iowa's Evangelicals
Historian, Princeton University
In a field with Rick Perry and Michelle Bachmann as options, perhaps one of the bigger surprises of Tuesday's Iowa caucus was the support of evangelical voters for the Catholic Rick Santorum. Representing 57% of caucus-goers (down three percent from four years ago), evangelical Iowans gave Santorum 32% of their support while evangelical candidates Perry and Bachmann could only muster 14% and 6%, respectively, from their fellow believers.
Mitt Romney, who won in Iowa by little more than a carefully-coiffed hair, also only grabbed 14% backing from evangelicals. Those low numbers among the Republican Party's most important constituency could portend trouble for the candidate who almost everyone agrees would be the automatic shoo-in for the GOP's nomination if not for his membership in the Mormon Church. If unable to shake evangelical apathy (or perhaps even antipathy) towards his Mormon faith, Romney will come up short again in his quest for the Republican ticket ...
First, it's worth looking at those numbers from Iowa again. While Romney clearly faltered among evangelicals in the Hawkeye state, it was at the expense of their support for a Catholic - not for one of their own. Between Santorum and Gingrich (who also received 14% support from evangelicals), Iowa born again caucus-goers gave the two Catholic contenders 46% of their vote compared to just 20% for the two evangelical candidates. While evangelical Republicans have often voted for Catholic candidates, rarely have they done so when they've also had one from their own flock to support. That evangelical voters in Iowa had not one but two fellow believers to choose from makes their tepid support for either all the more notable. Among the field, only Jon Huntsman, the Mormon candidate who essentially skipped Iowa, drew less support from evangelical voters than Michelle Bachmann did.
Secondly, it's easy to predict that Romney's poor showing among Iowa evangelicals forecasts more troubles for him with this crucial voting bloc in upcoming primaries. That Romney received more support from Iowa evangelicals in 2008 (when he came away with 19% of their votes) than he did on Tuesday certainly doesn't inspire confidence that he has successfully settled the "Mormon question" from four years ago. But if Mike Huckabee couldn't turn an evangelical-backed victory in Iowa into the Republican nomination in 2008, there's no reason to think that Romney's national chances have been doomed because only a few thousand evangelicals in Iowa found him tolerable this go-around ...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/neil-j-young/lessons-from-iowas-evange_b_1184522.html
MarkCharles
(2,261 posts)fundamentalism can and does to the mind of the voter.
Bachmann, Perry, Santorum, or even Herman Cain... those are the four candidates favored over the past few months by Iowa's evangelicals and fundamentalists. I think most of us on DU would agree that not one of those four people has a sufficiently robust "world view", nor a grasp of the essential elements of a pluralistic democratic republic such as the USA. By and large, the agenda of all four, to one degree or another, has to do more with their religious views and beliefs than with the nature of a democracy.
This is not really strong testimony if favor of a strong religious point of view being helpful to our nation, nor for it offering realistic solutions to the problems we as a nation are facing, in my opinion.
moobu2
(4,822 posts)simply pick one of their fellow nutcases as his running mate just like McCain did when he picked Sarah Palin. That may not be enough to win but that is what Romney will most certainly do.
struggle4progress
(118,236 posts)MarkCharles
(2,261 posts)He must know how Palin hurt McCain's chances, and now with McCain supporting him, he can get the inside story on idiot Palin.
If he wants half a chance to win, he'll need to appeal to the middle, not the extreme fundies, they will vote for him anyway to get Obama out of office.
If he picks one of those nut cases, he'll be dead in the water. No one but the far right will support him, not even some Repubs.
He'll pick that Ohio guy... Sen. Rob Portman.
FarCenter
(19,429 posts)Viva_Daddy
(785 posts)with all their nutty statement (or sexual escapades). The Evangelicals don't really LIKE Santorum, there was just nowhere else to turn. Huntsman is also a Morman and Paul scares them. They were even desperate enough to take another look at Gingrich until Romney's superpac reminded them of his baggage.