TAMPA — Ralph Reed, who has most definitely re-established himself as part of the GOP elite, dropped by earlier this week to talk about – among other things – religion and Mitt Romney.
The Republican presidential nominee will tonight take his Mormon faith front and center. Tonight’s invocation will be given by members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
A longtime friend, who shared leadership roles in the Mormon church with Romney, will testify on his behalf.
Both Reed and I were struck by the fact that, for the first time in U.S. history, the presidential ticket of a major party will lack a Protestant. But Reed, who now heads up the Faith and Freedom Coalition, went deeper:
”What’s even more interesting is that you’re at a Republican convention that was founded specifically as a Northern, Protestant, anti-slavery party. Lincoln was critical to getting the Germans. That is why he got the nomination. A Republican couldn’t win without Pennsylvania in 1860.
“So if you look at it, this Northern Protestant party has become an evangelical party – but it’s an evangelical party where a Catholic cardinal [gave] the opening prayer, without a Protestant on the ticket, and a Mormon and a Catholic will probably get a larger raw number of evangelical votes than George W. Bush did in ’04.
“In fact, that’s not probable. That’s definite.”
Reed posited that most of the nation’s anti-Mormon prejudice doesn’t come from the right:
’What is more disturbing to me is that 41 percent of self-identified liberals in a recent Gallup poll said they wouldn’t vote for a Mormon. There is bigotry against Mormons. It’s on the left.”
Not that Southern Baptists have changed their mind, Reed said. But politically, they don’t matter as much:
”Remember, if you’ve got a grandma sitting in the third row of an independent Baptist , white sideboard church who can’t bring herself to vote for a Mormon because she believes it’s a heresy, she’s more than likely in north Georgia, upstate South Carolina or eastern Tennessee.
“And we don’t need her. But when you talk about the suburbs of Orlando, or the exurbs of Cincinnati, that’s not their deal. It’s not an issue.”
***
My AJC colleague Daniel Malloy was with the Georgia delegation when Attorney General Sam Olens took the stage:
The scene on the floor during early evening speeches is one of delegates milling about, conversing, taking photos, looking for someone famous and generally paying about half attention to what’s going on at the podium.
But Georgia’s delegates rose to their feet when one of the Peach State’s own, Attorney General Sam Olens, approached the podium with his Florida counterpart, Pam Bondi. Then, most of them sat back down. The joint speech wasn’t much of a rouser – it focused on their efforts to repeal Obamacare and other examples in their mind of federal overreach – but the Georgians lustily joined in a call-and-response portion of the speech and pronounced themselves pleased and proud afterward.
“I was excited that somebody from Georgia is on that stage,” said state party chair Sue Everhart. “I thought all his remarks were really good. I’ve known Sam Olens since the ‘90s when he ran the first time for [Cobb County] commissioner. He was a great commissioner and just like tonight he always rose to the top, like cream, and tonight he made a wonderful speech.”
Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp said he did not consider the setting too overwhelming, as the Tampa Bay Times Forum was not much bigger than the arenas where Georgia state GOP conventions are held. But Kemp said speaking when the crowd isn’t hanging on your every word is a talent.
“One of the things you have to learn is just to be focused,” Kemp said. “It’s like that all the time. … You’re probably speaking more to the press than our audience to make sure that our message is out there and I think that’s what they were doing tonight.”
***
Also from the AJC’s Daniel Malloy:
Grovetown state Rep. Lee Anderson, the all-but-certain Republican challenger to U.S. Rep. John Barrow of Augusta, arrived Wednesday in Tampa and was a popular fellow on the convention floor – posing for photos with delegates and glad-handing with bigwigs like former Gov. Sonny Perdue.
According to Anderson, it was all about consolidating the state’s Republicans behind him in the state’s most watched fall congressional contest. Anderson leads a runoff with Augusta businessman Rick Allen, who has vowed a long-shot recount once the result is certified.
“We’re just seeing the Republican family,” Anderson said. “We’ve had the most important race [in] the state of Georgia and we need the family behind us, and that’s why we’re here. We’ve got great support from all over the state. I’m talking to all them, some great senators, we are putting a plan together to beat John Barrow and also send Obama home too.”
It was a contrast with Barrow, who is distancing himself from the president and is not attending the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte next week. Anderson also voiced his support for vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan – Wednesday night’s speaker and a figure Democrats plan to wield against Republicans, particularly for his plan to eventually make Medicare into a voucher system. Ryan and Mitt Romney are striking back forcefully, accusing Obama of raiding Medicare in his health care law, and Ryan gave a well-received speech Wednesday night.
On the Ryan Medicare plan, Anderson said: “We have to look at all the proposals but what they are looking at will be a large amount of our change in our medical area, and I support it.”
On Ryan’s budget as a whole, he said: “You know, we can’t change it overnight. And it’s going to hurt. … But we’re going to bounce back and we’re going to be stronger than ever.”
Anderson, who has sometimes struggled in debate and forum settings, declined to debate Allen during the runoff. Asked whether he would debate Barrow, he replied: “We’ll be looking at situations where maybe we could possibly have some debates, yeah.”
- By Jim Galloway, Political Insider
For instant updates, follow me on Twitter, or connect with me on Facebook.
237 comments Add your comment
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:06 pm
@bernie
yes its ironic that white conservatives love cheering on their teams which are predominately made up of liberal blacks..
Will Jones - Atlanta Jeffersonian Exegesis
August 30th, 2012
2:07 pm
Any not wishing to be part of national healthcare’s “risk pool” are welcome to get out of Our Country for their loyalty is to Big Insurance’s fascist oligopoly and not to “E Pluribus Unum.”
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:07 pm
@shav
u lied when u said people would go to jail, admit it.
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:07 pm
I for some reason heard there was a fee and that some businesses were maybe thinking of paying the fee instead of the actual insurance, so they would have $ leftover to pay the highest corporate taxes on the planet…
I also was under the impression the IRS was going to be the enforcer of Obamacare and if you didn’t have ins. then you had to pay a penalty? what happens if I dont’ pay it?
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:09 pm
@shav
gee u tell me what does LIMBAUGH say about it,lol.
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:09 pm
so now as a country we need to amende the constitution to include: “life, liberty, persuite of happiness, free gov’t healthcare, free college tuition, free foodstamps, etc…”
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:10 pm
where DUBYA at?????????????????????????he messed up so bad the gop told him 2 stay away
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:11 pm
wait, did China approva all that “free” stuff?
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:11 pm
@shav
the constitution has been ammended before
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:12 pm
@shav
now youre afraid of china…conservatives see a boogeyman around every corner dont you
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:12 pm
actually, W was presented with him and Daddy Busch on a charming little interview and played at RNC
td
August 30th, 2012
2:13 pm
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:10 pm
where DUBYA at?????????????????????????he messed up so bad the gop told him 2 stay away
You are so lame and such a huge liar and it is obvious you did not actually watch the convention last night.
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:15 pm
China’s military is the size of the entire US population and we owe them Trillions of $.
Ummm… yeah, I would keep my out for those commies… SO!?
Will Jones - Atlanta Jeffersonian Exegesis
August 30th, 2012
2:16 pm
Bush did 9/11, his father did JFK and MLK, his Knight of Malta g-father financed Hitler…all for Vatican banker Rockefeller and the Roman Catholic “Anti-Christ” of which Th. Jefferson warned.
“Nice” family. lol
Death for Treason
Mild Mannered Moderate
August 30th, 2012
2:17 pm
@shav…..isn’t that the Declaration of independence? O_o
@tallywhacker – Stop it with Ann Romney already. She. Was
Not. There. And if you have something to say, say it here stop emailing me. Also, I was wrong. I listen to her speech again and I heard no slurring of her speech AT ALL. There were some awkward pauses but that could happen to anyone who is inexperienced at being a politician’s wife. Leave off with the mental degradation and shamus already. That’s all on Mitt.
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:17 pm
@shav
maybe we can declare SHARIA LAW in CHINA to stop them,,,lol
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:17 pm
@lefy
your right, evil does not exist, there is nothing to fear on earth… All Republicans are just paranoid sychos!
(um hum, WWI-II)
Southern Baptist | Republican | Ralph Reed | Mormon | election | vote
August 30th, 2012
2:17 pm
[...] continued to speak the word of God with boldness. (Acts 4:31 ESV)Jim Galloway quoting Ralph Reed. Ralph Reed: ‘There’s bigotry against Mormons. It’s on left.’ blogs.ajc.com ↩Colleen McCain Nelson and Patrick O’Connor. Mormon [...]
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:19 pm
@Will Jones
guess we made it through all that anti-Christ stuff bc the Bush’s are retired and we are all still here… and just in case you have been a sleep for the last 4-6 yrs, Democrats have basically been running the country since 2006 when they won the house and senate and then Pres…
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:20 pm
@shav
I SEE DEAD PEOPLE!!!!!!!!
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:22 pm
@SHAV
YEP and we havent had a terrorist attack …too bad dubya couldnt keep america safe
Mild Mannered Moderate
August 30th, 2012
2:26 pm
@will Jones – thank you for explaining that. I guess the tea party is as bad as everyone says it is…..
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:26 pm
yep, I admit, I have been paranoid ever since 9-11. It changed me forever.
zeke
August 30th, 2012
2:27 pm
td, the penny plan is a start for discussion, but it looked like they only put about a dime’s worth of work (true number crunching & validty of assumptions)
the decision to close the plant was made by gm and before he took office….;hard to argue with a picture though
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/wp/2012/08/30/obama-could-not-have-saved-janesville-gm-plant-it-closed-before-he-took-office/
liberalefty
August 30th, 2012
2:30 pm
@zeke
TD is a birther u cant expect any facts from him
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:30 pm
those silly Taliban
Dr Dave
August 30th, 2012
2:31 pm
I am a proud Viet Vet and would like to know why everyone is condeming Mitt about his sons not serving…They are all grown men..they have minds of their own!!
shav
August 30th, 2012
2:49 pm
Dr. Dave
Thank You for your service.
Will Jones - Atlanta Jeffersonian Exegesis
August 30th, 2012
2:54 pm
Nice try, shilling for traitors, fake Vet.
Laman
August 30th, 2012
3:13 pm
Look at where Mormon politicians have gotten elected outside of Utah and Idaho: Harry Reid (NV), Tom Udall (NM), Mitt Romney (MA), George Romney (MI), Gordon Smith (OR), Paula Hawkins (FL), etc. None of these are conservative areas.
Mormons, whether Republican or Democrat, have not won elections in conservative areas, except for Utah or Idaho. Democrats will vote for Mormons. Non-Mormon Republicans will generally not vote for Mormons.
In the 2008 Utah Republican primary, which was held on February 5 (Super Tuesday), Mitt Romney won 89.5% of the vote compared to 5% for John McCain and 3% for Ron Paul.
Mormons are biased for Mormons. Non-Mormon conservatives are biased against Mormons.
oldfart
August 30th, 2012
3:55 pm
Alright now, Nurse Ratched already announced it was medication time. If you aren’t willing to take it orally…
Carol
August 30th, 2012
4:09 pm
TrishaDishaWarEagle
the shrillness of the clayco-south dekalb-west end coalition on this board is rising..proof positive that they sense that the vile disgusting marxist hussein is going down the tubes with every tick-up of gas prices and every disgusting revelation about Choom and every wonderful speech at the convention
+++++++
You don’t have to speak in code. Why not just say BLACK.
I get so much amusement from the GOP when then Dems respond to them. Why do you guys always think that responding equals being worried or nervous? The reality is, we just love when you serve things to us on a platter and make it so easy. It’s like Daniel in the lion’s den minus God’s protection.
Carol
August 30th, 2012
4:15 pm
shav
@Carol,
Oh, so you mean the Harvard Law Review pamplet was not real? I am shocked! How can they get away with such lies!!!!
+++++++
Show me where I said it wasn’t real? Show me where I lied? I merely commented on you using a dead man’s blog to bolster your argument. Now you have called me a liar for something I NEVER said. THIS IS WHAT YOUR SIDE DOES. They use stupid red herring to deflect truth and honest discord.
honested
August 30th, 2012
4:28 pm
ralph reed was sitting behind me in a booth at Buckhead Diner one day years ago.
I thought about what a favor it would be to the world to just drive a fork through him.
But I wasn’t sure the fork was real silver.
Will Jones - Atlanta Jeffersonian Exegesis
August 31st, 2012
12:09 am
Reed is satanic. Georgia and America is being sifted.
Jason Allred
August 31st, 2012
1:55 am
With all the media attention on Mormonism, I’d suggest to anyone that they find a fellow Mormon and ask them questions about what we believe. I’m a Mormon and am always happy to answer questions about my faith. (Twitter: @jason_allred)
Being a Mormon has brought me closer to my Savior, Jesus Christ. It has also helped me develop a love for others. I am grateful to have had a spiritual witness from God that what I believe is true.
Phillip C. Smith
August 31st, 2012
1:19 pm
Thank you for your fair article. I see attempts on the part of many to try and get it right about us. Writers and respondents should keep in mind the following by Krister Stendahl (1921-2008), Lutheran minister and former professor at the Divinity School of Harvard University, famous in part for outlining very insightful guidelines for inter-religious discussion:
Stendahl’s Three Rules of Religious Understanding
(1) When you are trying to understand another religion, you should ask the adherents of that religion and not its enemies.
(2) Don’t compare your best to their worst.
(3) Leave room for “holy envy.” (By this Stendahl meant that you should be willing to recognize elements in the other religious tradition or faith that you admire and wish could, in some way, be reflected in your own religious tradition or faith.)
Continue to try and raise the level of religious commentary. I am sorry for the critics who persist in violating the above rules.
Phillip C. Smith, Ph.D.