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The Myth of McCain's Weakness Among Evangelicals
Guest Editorial
Op-Ed By Steven Waldman, Wall Street Journal
June 11, 2008
Article Excerpts:
Conventional wisdom holds that John McCain is struggling to win evangelical voters. Evangelical leader
Mark DeMoss predicted last week that he'd run weaker than any Republican since 1976, and a front page
New York Times piece detailed the evangelical malaise.
Sen. McCain has been criticized by prominent Christian leaders such as James Dobson, who said at one
point he might even stay home instead of supporting someone as repulsive as Sen. McCain. They view him
as insufficiently conservative and still fume over his comments in 2000 that some religious conservative
leaders were "agents of intolerance." In the primaries, most Christian leaders backed Mitt Romney or Mike
Huckabee. More recently, Sen. McCain's decision to jettison two prominent conservative Christians -- John
Hagee and Rod Parsely -- has sent his God-o-Meter ratings plummeting like a stone in a baptismal font.
But is this conventional wisdom really true? Or to be more precise, Sen. McCain clearly has a problem
with evangelical leaders -- but does he really have a major problem with evangelical voters?
On the contrary, Sen. McCain won the nomination in part because he did far better than expected with
rank-and-file evangelicals.
Not Too Shabby
For instance, in New Hampshire, among the 21 percent of the Republican electorate that was evangelical
or "born again," Sen. McCain won 29 percent, Mr. Romney 28 percent and Mr. Huckabee 27 percent -- even
though Mr. Huckabee is a former evangelical preacher and Mr. Romney had the endorsements of many key
Christian leaders.
In Texas, where half the primary voters described themselves as evangelical, Sen. McCain won 44 percent
of them, while Mr. Huckabee got 48 percent. And in Florida, the decisive state that clinched the
nomination for Sen. McCain, he once again played to a tie among evangelicals (Mr. Huckabee 31 percent,
Mr. Romney 31 percent, Sen. McCain 28 percent.) Not too shabby for someone supposedly viewed as just one
step above Sen. Lucifer.
Where he does have trouble is among Southern evangelicals; in South Carolina, for instance, Mr. Huckabee
won 43 percent and Sen. McCain 27 percent, though even here he beat Fred Thompson and Mr. Romney, both
candidates supposed to do much better than Sen. McCain among evangelicals.
In a recent Rasmussen poll, Sen. McCain was winning 58 percent of evangelicals, and his Democratic
rival, Sen. Barack Obama, was winning 32 percent.
Running Stronger Among Rank and File
Why would Sen. McCain be doing so much better among evangelical voters than evangelical leaders?
First, the leadership's disgust with Sen. McCain stems from the candidate's treatment of them. His
"agents of intolerance" speech was not an attack on evangelicals, but on a few of their leaders.
Second, some of the issues over which Christian leaders have chastised Sen. McCain are inside-the-beltway
concerns that don't resonate with rank-and-file voters. For instance, Christian leaders often cite Sen.
McCain's authorship of campaign finance legislation that they believe would restrict their lobbying and
advocacy abilities. Most voters care little about this issue.
Third, though he's reluctant to talk about his personal faith, in many ways Sen. McCain is substantively
in perfect alignment with today's evangelical voters. They tend to be conservative but have veered from
the religious right on a few issues, one of which is climate change -- the exact issue that Sen. McCain
has highlighted as his point of departure with Republican orthodoxy.
Fourth, Sen. McCain's support of the Iraq war, his war-hero history and his emphasis on fighting
terrorism. . .
Steven Waldman is president and editor-in-chief of Beliefnet.com, and author of Founding Faith.
Previously the national editor of U.S. News & World Report, he is a recognized expert on religion,
social issues and politics.
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