A spokeswoman for U.S. Rep. Phil Gingrey confirmed this afternoon that the Marietta Republican walked out of President Barack Obama’s address at the annual National Prayer Breakfast, offended by what the congressman said was an injection of political rhetoric into an occasion of non-partisan reflection.
“He was glad that the president attended, but he felt that there were 364 days in a year to give a speech on your policies or campaign rhetoric,” said Gingrey spokeswoman Jen Talaber.
She said Gingrey enjoyed the remarks by the event’s keynote speaker, conservative author Eric Metaxes, who was in South Carolina last month campaigning with GOP presidential candidate Rick Santorum.
Here are the opening paragraphs from the Associated Press account of Obama’s remarks:
WASHINGTON — Blending politics and religion, President Barack Obama said his Christian faith is a driving force behind his economic policies, from Wall Street reform to his calls for the wealthy to pay higher taxes.
Obama’s remarks Thursday at the National Prayer Breakfast were his most explicit account of how his personal religious beliefs factor into his decision-making on the nation’s pressing problems. The comments came amid election-year criticism from Catholic groups and some Republicans that the president is waging a war on religion following his decision to require church-affiliated institutions to cover free birth control for employees.
Speaking to more than 3,000 people at the annual breakfast, Obama said “faith and values” should play as much as role in tackling the nation’s challenges as sound decision-making and smart policies.
Talaber, the spokeswoman for Gingrey, said the Georgia congressman – a devout Catholic — listened to “several minutes” of Obama’s remarks.
“[Gingrey] said he was disappointed, because he wanted to know what was in the president’s heart, and not just rhetoric,” the spokeswoman said. “So he said that he decided to quietly get up and leave because he felt that it wasn’t the time or the place, and that the president didn’t seem to be aware of the meaning of the breakfast or why so many people came to hear him speak. He was offended by the very tone of the speech.”
Talaber said she didn’t know whether any other members of Congress who followed Gingrey’s example. “He wasn’t trying to rally the troops,” she said.
The AP account backs up one of Gingrey’s points, reporting that the president’s defense of his policies was a “rare injection” of politics into the annual bipartisan event. Here’s the remainder of the piece:
[Obama] said, for example, that his own call for fairness in the tax code — a central tenet of his State of the Union address and his 2012 campaign — is both economically sound and consistent with the teachings of Jesus.
“If I’m willing to give something up as somebody who’s been extraordinarily blessed, and give up some of the tax breaks that I enjoy, I actually think that’s going to make economic sense,” he said. “But for me as a Christian, it also coincides with Jesus’s teaching that ‘for unto whom much is given, much shall be required.’ It mirrors the Islamic belief that those who’ve been blessed have an obligation to use those blessings to help others, or the Jewish doctrine of moderation and consideration for others.”
He also said the Wall Street reform he championed both “makes the economy stronger for everyone” and abides by God’s command to “love thy neighbor as thyself” because it helped people who had been hurt or treated unfairly by financial institutions.
And Obama said he believed in a “biblical call” to care for the poor and to follow “the responsibility we’re given in Proverbs to ‘Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute.’”
The president’s remarks came one day after Mitt Romney, the front-runner for the Republican nomination, created a flap with clumsy comments about the poor.
Romney said wasn’t concerned about the “very poor” because they have a safety net. He also said he wasn’t concerned about the very rich and intended to focus his campaign on the middle class.
“You can focus on the very poor; that’s not my focus,” Romney said.
While the White House said the president’s remarks were not meant to be political, his comments did fit neatly into the Obama campaign’s effort to draw sharp contrasts between the president and Romney.
The former Massachusetts governor is among Republicans who have criticized the president for not exempting religious organizations from a requirement in the 2010 health care law that requires insurers to cover birth control for their employees. Romney said this week that the president was ordering “religious organizations to violate their conscience.”
GOP presidential candidate Newt Gingrich said Obama has “declared war on the Catholic Church,” and House Speaker John Boehner said Thursday the mandate violates the Constitution.
Obama never mentioned the controversy in his remarks Thursday, nor did he reference his Republican rivals by name.
But his broader defense of his policies was a rare interjection of politics into the annual prayer breakfast. The breakfast is organized by bipartisan congressional lawmakers, but speakers often avoid overt political references beyond calling for civility and respect in Washington.
While Obama speaks often about his faith, he prefers to worship in private. He said Thursday that he starts each morning with a brief prayer, then spends time reading scripture. Sometimes, he said, pastors come to the Oval Officer to pray with him, for his family and for the country.
He also described his own religious transformation in deeply personal language Thursday, from growing up in a non-religious home to finding Christ later in his life. He recalled a visit a few years ago with the evangelist Rev. Billy Graham, which ended with the president feeling compelled to pray for the aging Graham.
Obama said when he found himself at that moment not knowing what to say, the Holy Spirit interceded.
“I have fallen on my knees with great regularity since that moment, asking God for guidance not just in my personal life and my Christian walk, but in the life of this nation and in the values that hold us together and keep us strong,” he said.
- By Jim Galloway, Political Insider
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710 comments Add your comment
arlene
February 3rd, 2012
5:55 pm
Thank you, honested. Gingrey just wanted a reason to show his disrespect. He thought he was being cute; he only showed his ignorance.
No Incumbents Elected
February 3rd, 2012
6:03 pm
Obama 2012
February 3rd, 2012
2:54 pm
the dems had total control of congress and the white house for two years and did not do squat to improve the economy. I know, the repub had it so messed up it was beyond repair.
Bullet County
February 3rd, 2012
6:13 pm
Mr. Gingrey had to leave so he could work on repaying the taxpayers the more than $60 Million that his Bank of Ellijay (shut down in 2010 and taken over by federal regulators at a cost of more than $60 million) cost us. Reprehensible doesn’t begin to describe this man’s behavior.
Frederick Douglass
February 3rd, 2012
6:14 pm
A spokesman within U.S. representative Phil Gingrey’s office confirmed this afternoon that Dr. Gingrey stormed out of the annual National Prayer Breakfast because of an apparent discrepancy with his food preparation. In accordance with strict redneck dietary laws, the congressman’s breakfast of fried squirrel brains, poached possum snout, and an omelette of buzzard eggs required the blessing of his local Imperial Wizard who missed his connecting flight out of Hartsfield, and was a notable no show.
td
February 3rd, 2012
6:19 pm
Frederick Douglass
February 3rd, 2012
6:14 pm
You made a funny and it made me laugh. Good job.
honested
February 3rd, 2012
6:28 pm
Fredrick D..
I’m sure there must have at least been an ‘exalted cyclops’ within a few blocks.
honested
February 3rd, 2012
6:34 pm
This might be a good time to take a minute and reflect on Congressman gingrey and some of the representatives who are his closest Georgia cohorts.
Since at least 2006 they have been long on displaying their ’southern indignation’ and short on attending to the Country’s (and their constituent’s) business.
We don’t elect these clowns to pander to their funders, we elect them to attend to the difficult business of governing the country and make the compromises necessary to do so.
Any fool can be an inflexible extremist. There are places where it will even get you elected repeatedly.
But it doesn’t qualify you to know and respond to the needs of your countrymen.
So please, pay attention in November. Vote for people who will attend to the job at hand rather than focus on pranks for the camera.
IT IS IMPORTANT!
A God Fearing Woman
February 3rd, 2012
7:35 pm
Religion out of politics, free speech out of politics, owning and having the right to bear arms out of politics. Frankly anyone that reads this should be concerned with your own soul and how “your behavior” is first. Lets get parties out of politics and go with the man or woman that do what they say they will do. I read my bible everyday and I pray for my state, my county and my family and loved ones. Get a real grip America- It is time to get Right in Action, Heart and MOUTHs. Thank God for Grace and Mercy.
Mitchell
February 3rd, 2012
9:14 pm
The President of the United States of America interjecting politics in his comments at the National Prayer Breakfast?
Who the F does he think he is?!
The President of the United States?
What was the president thinking? That’s what I want to know.
Mitchell
February 3rd, 2012
9:28 pm
I can’t believe a political leader in this country would ever be so bold, careless really and just plain irresponsible enough to marry both politics and religion in a speech at a public event.
Conservative republicans like Representative Gingrey have long been known for their opposition to Christianity not to mention extremist fundamentalist dogma as it pertains to the law of the land.
Congressman Gingrey’s abrupt exit from President Obama’s speech is consistent with his belief system.
I couldn’t agree more with the man. Keep religion out of government and legislation.
It has no place there.
That is all.