When the Christian Right did step outside of the realm of social issues, it often stumbled, much as the Prohibitionists did in the early 20th Century, when they supported big government measures like the establishment of a central bank or railroad regulation in exchange for the Progressives' support of Prohibition. In like manner, the Christian Right endorsed President Bush's "faith based" social programs, even though they represented an additional expansion of Federal power. Several, including the recently fired director of the Christian Coalition, attempted an outreach to the environmentalists, even though such people are anathema to the mineral, lumber, farming, and ranching interests.
An appeal to the principles of the Sagebrush Rebellion in the 1970s may help the GOP regain ground in the West.
Not a bad analysis.
It points, also, to the genius of Reagan: he embodied all aspects of conservatism: westernism, social conservatism, southern populism, Wall Street supply side conservatism, and aggressive foreign policy/cold war neoconservatism.
That is why he won.
The next successful GOP leader will need to do the same.
So far, I don't see any volunteers.