There appears to be some confusion among the Religious Right about what’s best for America. At least, there is disagreement as to which Republican candidate for President is the best choice.
First of all, only a Republican will do for them, so that narrows the possibilities. Secondly, the candidate has to embrace their “values.” Thirdly, they can’t find one.
Or is it that they don’t really have an identified and agreed-upon set of “values” that are paramount and inherently “Christian.” Maybe they just want to win the election and are seeking someone they think will do that.
Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) has received the endorsement of former rival, Sen. Sam Brownback (R-KS), who apparently is well-regarded among conservative Christians. Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney is touted by Paul Weyrich, the co-founder of the defunct Moral Majority. Family values pro Gary Bauer is supporting Fred Thompson, who claims he is “right with God,” although he doesn’t attend church and refuses to discuss his “beliefs.” Gov. Mike Huckabee (R-AR) has convinced Rick Scarborough of the Southern Baptists that he’s the man for the work.
Thrice-married, pro-choice, advocate of gay rights, pro-gun control Rudy Giuliani, picked up the vote of Pat Robertson.
No, really, he did.
According to an article in the Washington Post, Republican pollster Tony Fabrizio discovered that half of Republicans are turned off by a Robertson endorsement of a candidate, and that prior Giuliani supporters “view the endorsement negatively” by a margin of 3 to 1.
It seems that Robertson is throwing his dwindling weight behind Giuliani based on anti-Islam sentiments. Hating Muslims, at least those who exhibit “bloodlust,” has bubbled to the top of Robertson’s policy priorities.
The same article states, “Richard Land, a senior official of the Southern Baptist Convention, said Robertson’s endorsement probably reflects a belief by the TV evangelist that Giuliani is the candidate most likely to beat the Democratic nominee.” Land added, “I’m not going to vote for Rudy under any circumstances.”
There is disarray among those who think we live in a “Christian nation.”
Updated: Friday, 9 November 2007 2:35 PM EST
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