Surprise! Evangelicals Were
The Key Voting Block
By Wendy Wright
Evangelicals
voted in force in this year’s election, securing the presidency for George W.
Bush, granting parents in Florida the right to be notified before their minor
daughter’s abortion, and passing marriage protections laws in every state they
were offered - even liberal Oregon.
Moral
values topped the list of priorities for many voters, rising even above the war
in Iraq and the economy, as the key motivating factor.
President
Bush knows his strongest base, who they are and what
drives them. Perhaps this is because, as many Evangelicals and conservative
Catholics can relate, he is one of us.
Of the prominent battleground state of Ohio, which Senators Kerry and
Edwards refuse to accept as a loss, ABC News’ Mark Halpern
reported, “Evangelicals
voted overwhelmingly for Bush in Ohio, 70 percent to 30 percent for Kerry.”
Not only in Ohio, he stated, but all across the country, Bush won a large
majority of evangelical support.
While “soccer moms” could never be
verified as a significant, or lasting, voting block, there is no denying that
Evangelicals and conservative Catholics make up a sizable portion of America,
spanning the spectrum of other blocks such as African-Americans and Hispanics.
This revelation could change the face of future campaigns.
Brian
Williams of MSNBC News stated, “White evangelical voters kept their promise to
get out the vote, representing one in five voters today.” But this overlooks a
fundamental reality - many African Americans are also Evangelical. In fact,
black pastors stepped to the forefront to fiercely back marriage-protection
initiatives.
And
now Democrats are facing the harsh reality that dismissing, and even
belittling, Evangelicals’ deeply held beliefs may not be a smart tactic for
winning national elections.
As
the results came rolling in on election night, NBC’s Tom Brokaw raised this
with former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell. Brokaw noted that every
time he talks with Evangelicals they express the feeling that they’re not taken
seriously by the Democratic Party, that they’re mocked, even belittled.
Mitchell confessed, “That’s true of some Democrats but not all.” Implying that
it merely has to do with packaging, he said, “The question is how to appeal to
them that makes sense to the party and the country.”
Looking
at the huge swatch of red covering election maps of the country, Mitchell
conceded that Democrats cannot win by “being a regional party.” He acknowledged
that that party is lacking any kind of national base. “You have to be a
national party to compete in national elections,” he noted.
Faith
played an extraordinary role in this election, remarked Joe Scarborough, former
congressman and political analyst for MSNBC. President Bush is a man of faith;
Senator Kerry just didn’t get it. “He thinks by saying he was an altar boy, he
covered it,” Joe said.
This
reflects the current culture war. It is between those who believe in God and
recognize that morality is crucial to a successful life and functioning
society, and those who reject absolutes, whether in the form of virtue or a
Supreme Being to Whom we must answer.
Now
that both political parties recognize that Evangelicals and conservative
Catholics are a formidable force that should not be ignored, we must be very
careful. Shrewd politicians will look for ways to peel off our votes and to woo
compromise on issues about which we have no right to bargain - such as the
right for the most vulnerable to live.
A
terrible warning comes in the win of California’s Proposition 71, which
approved $3 billion for unethical embryonic stem-cell research. This could not
have passed without the support of many Evangelicals and Catholics. Not only is
it a financial boondoggle that grants biotech insiders the right to secretly
spend all that money without accountability, but the basis of the initiative is
the constitutional right to create human embryos (even through cloning) to
experiment upon and kill.
Clearly, there
is work to be done within our house. First, we must ensure that Evangelicals
remain faithful in our civic duty to vote for people who, as nearly as possible,
reflect biblical views. Second, we must teach our people how righteousness
is worked out in public policy. Evangelicals and conservative Catholics distinguish
ourselves from other special interest groups in that we do not seek our own
advancement or political power; we want to see virtue respected so the people
may rejoice. Our newly exercised muscle must be used wisely, only in God’s
service.
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Wendy Wright is Senior Policy Director for Concerned Women for America
(CWA), the nation’s largest public policy women’s organization representing
more than 500,000 women and like-minded men. Her focus is sanctity of life and
international issues, and she is frequently interviewed in national media on
moral, social and political issues. Wright helps promote legislation and
international policies that are beneficial to women and families, briefs
congressional and administration staff on pro-family issues, and trains
grassroots activists. For more information about CWA visit their web site at
www.cwa.org.