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Newt and the Social Conservatives (A twice-divorced candidate seeks Evangelical acceptance)
National Review ^ | 11/18/2011 | Katrina Trinko

Posted on 11/18/2011 8:04:29 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Three marriages. Two divorces. Add up the numbers, and Newt Gingrich is an improbable candidate to win over the influential social-conservative bloc in the GOP.

But in this unconventional cycle, both national and early-primary-state evangelical and social-conservative leaders are signaling that Gingrich’s personal history is no insurmountable obstacle, although some would like to see him further address his past decisions.

“In general, I think people who have experienced the ultimate form of forgiveness themselves are willing to extend mercy and extend forgiveness to others,” says Ralph Reed, founder and chairman of the Faith and Freedom Coalition.

“In Newt’s case, he’s been very transparent and open about saying that he made mistakes in the past and that he’s found forgiveness and peace through faith in God,” Reed adds. “He’s got a strong marriage, and he’s close to his daughters and the rest of his family, and just based on what we’re seeing in Iowa and nationally, I think he addressed this, and I tend to think it’s a largely settled issue.”

Richard Land, director of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, is more skeptical, saying that Gingrich’s candidacy will be a “hard sell” for many voters. Land has been doing informal focus groups among Southern Baptists for the past two years on Gingrich’s candidacy, as he expected Gingrich to run and be a serious contender. He found that women are especially wary of Gingrich.

“He’s got a gender problem,” Land says. “His toughest audience is going to be evangelical women. Evangelical men, depending on what Newt does and says, are more likely to give him the benefit of the doubt.” Women, on the other hand, have told Land that they would vote for Gingrich “under no circumstances.” If the general election comes down to Gingrich and Obama, they say, they may just not vote.

Land thinks Gingrich should “find a pro-family venue” and deliver a speech akin to John F. Kennedy’s famous 1960 speech on Catholicism.

“He needs to make the speech of his life, and in his mind, his target has got to be 40- to 60-year-old evangelical women,” Land advises. “And he’s got to convince them that he’s sorry, he regrets it, he would do anything he could to undo the pain and the hurt that he’s caused, he understands the pain and the hurt that he’s caused, and he has learned his lesson. That he has thrown himself on the grace of Jesus, and that if they elect him president, he will not let them down — that there will be no moral scandal in a Gingrich White House.”

One key move Gingrich made in 2007 was doing an interview with influential social conservative James Dobson, then chairman of the board at the prominent evangelical organization Focus on the Family. Gingrich’s candid and contrite answers may have helped make significant inroads in reconciling social conservatives to him. Speaking about former misdeeds, Gingrich said, “I look back on those as periods of weakness and periods that I’m not only not proud of, but that I would deeply urge my children and grandchildren not to follow in my footsteps.”

“Somebody once said that when you’re young you want justice and that when you get older you want mercy,” Gingrich mused later in the interview. “I also believe that there are things in my own life that I have turned to God and have gotten on my knees and prayed about and sought God’s forgiveness.”

Penny Nance, president and CEO of Concerned Women for America, praises Gingrich for being “very transparent” in that interview and for showing a willingness “to discuss some of the mistakes he’s made in his life.” Nance wasn’t the only one listening; many Iowans also likely tuned in, according to Bob Vander Plaats, Mike Huckabee’s 2008 Iowa campaign chairman and currently president of the social-conservative group The Family Leader, who extols Gingrich for being “very upfront, very transparent, very humble and repentful” in his conversation with Dobson.

Another advantage to Gingrich’s fessing up in 2007, Vander Plaats notes, is that it avoids the appearance of a sudden change of heart. “It wasn’t what I would call a presidential conversion. There are times when we talk about Paul having the ‘road to Damascus’ conversion. We sometimes in Iowa say some of these candidates have had a ‘road to Des Moines’ conversion,” he chuckles.

Unlike Land, Vander Plaats doesn’t think women are necessarily opposed to a Gingrich candidacy. “I really thought some of the soccer moms would really have an issue,” he muses. So when he heard that a soccer mom was supporting Gingrich, he asked her about it. “She put it in kind of a unique way,” Vander Plaats said of the woman’s answer. “She said, ‘I believe his childish ways are behind him.’”

This Saturday, Gingrich (along with the other presidential candidates, minus Mitt Romney and Jon Huntsman) is slated to attend Vander Plaats’s forum, featuring Frank Luntz as moderator, which should give him another opportunity to make his case to Iowa social conservatives.

Ann Trimble-Ray, a Republican Central Committee county chairwoman in Iowa who considers herself socially conservative, thinks that Gingrich’s “past issues with marital infidelity” may have “kept folks from jumping on a Gingrich bandwagon.” But as Hawkeye voters have whipped through other candidates, a narrowing field has forced them to reconsider. Furthermore, while social conservatives want a candidate who has promised “to vote right” on the issues they care about, Trimble-Ray says, they also want someone who is “best positioned to go up against Barack Obama in the general election.”

In evangelical stronghold South Carolina, there is similar openness to Gingrich’s being the nominee. Oran P. Smith, president and CEO of the Palmetto Family Council, notes that most evangelicals have at some moment in their lives “turned away from their bad ways and moved forward toward a Christian worldview” and may thus be sympathetic to Gingrich’s journey.

“The way Newt Gingrich has handled his past, he has been very direct about the fact that he thought that his former ways were sinful ways, and I think generally, because of the experience of the average evangelical, evangelical Christians tend to be pretty quick to forgive,” Smith observes.

Nor does he see any need for Gingrich to deliberately address the matter again in a prominent way. Instead, he thinks that a low-key approach and a willingness to take questions on the topic will best serve Gingrich. “He doesn’t need to be doing any mea culpa press conferences, I don’t think. But when he is talking to private groups and informally, I think he needs to address it,” he says.

A boon for Gingrich is his daughter Jackie Gingrich Cushman’s decision to pen a column in May addressing the oft-repeated lie that Gingrich served her mother Jackie Battley Gingrich with divorce papers as she was dying of cancer. That, Cushman emphasized in her column, was not what happened. While Gingrich did take Cushman and her sister to the hospital to visit their mother, his first wife, after she had had a benign tumor removed in surgery, the divorce process had been initiated prior to the visit by Jackie Battley Gingrich (who is still alive).

Beyond his marital history, another potential sticking point for Gingrich when courting evangelical voters is his conversion to Catholicism two years ago. (Gingrich was previously Southern Baptist.) Land estimates that at most “a tiny sliver” of evangelicals, primarily older people, will reject Gingrich on that ground, noting that conversion hasn’t much dented evangelical support for former Florida governor Jeb Bush or current Kansas governor Sam Brownback, both Catholic converts from Protestant backgrounds. Smith agrees. “We have a heritage in South Carolina that’s mostly Protestant, clearly,” he says, “but I don’t really think most evangelicals when they are choosing who to vote for are thinking in those terms, to parse the differences between the professing Christian denominations.”

Ultimately, for Gingrich, the key to winning over dubious social conservatives is consistently showing both that he understands why his past troubles them and that he is no longer the man he used to be.

“Character counts and it should count, and we want to see leaders who have the right moral compass,” Concerned Women for America’s Nance reflects, but she notes that there is also “room for redemption.”

“It’s important for people to own their mistakes,” she adds, “and the more that Newt Gingrich does that, the better it will be for him.”

— Katrina Trinko is an NRO reporter.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: circularfiringsquad; gingrich; influencepeddler; newt; newtcare; nro4romney; nrovsamerica; nrovsconservatives; porkbarrel; rino; rinonro
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1 posted on 11/18/2011 8:04:32 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

I don’t care about his divorces. I do care about his RINOness


2 posted on 11/18/2011 8:07:58 AM PST by GeronL (The Right to Life came before the Right to Happiness)
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To: SeekAndFind
....when he spoke on Dobson's radio show in 2007, Gingrich refused to say that he was actually repentant. The evangelical leader repeatedly pressed him on that point: "When I hear you talk about this dark side of your life...you didn't mention repentance. Do you understand that word repentance?"
-- from the thread Newt and Evangelicals: Not a Match Made in Heaven
"Mrs. Gingrich #2 was dumped after her husband had carried on an extramarital affair with a fetching, blond congressional staffer named Callista Bisek, who went on to become the present Mrs. Gingrich #3. This Family Values paradigm was complicated by the fact that whilst Mr. Gingrich was filibustering Ms. Bisek over the Speaker’s desk, he was simultaneously leading the impeachment charge against a naughty president of the United States....The much-married Newt Gingrich converts to Catholicism this weekend—and I’d pay a year’s salary to have been a bug on the wall during his religious instruction."
-- Christopher Buckley, from the thread The Audacity of Poping
Related thread:
Newt and Evangelicals: Not a Match Made in Heaven

3 posted on 11/18/2011 8:09:07 AM PST by Alex Murphy (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2703506/posts?page=518#518)
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To: SeekAndFind

The spendthrift, big-government, global-warming supporting side of him is why I’ll not be voting for him. Oh, that and the lobbying against conservatives on behalf of Fannie Mae. And the whole “compassionate conservatism” idiocy.

He’s a consummate politician in a time when talk is cheap. No thanks.


4 posted on 11/18/2011 8:09:27 AM PST by snowrip (Liberal? You are a socialist idiot with no rational argument.)
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To: SeekAndFind
his target has got to be 40- to 60-year-old evangelical women

Right. Like this demo is going to stay home or vote for Obama instead.

This country has to first back away from socialism before we can go back to chosing leaders based on faith and social issues.

I wish it was not this way, but backing away from socialism; from either Obama or another RINO is much more important.

5 posted on 11/18/2011 8:11:34 AM PST by cicero2k
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To: SeekAndFind
""""“I also believe that there are things in my own life that I have turned to God and have gotten on my knees and prayed about and sought God’s forgiveness.”"""""

AMAZING GRACE, available to ALL.

6 posted on 11/18/2011 8:11:34 AM PST by annieokie
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To: SeekAndFind

If a conservative having been divorced is such a problem for evangelicals, they better stop listening to Rush Limbaugh, he’s on marriage #4 and Ronald Reagan was divorced as well. While, it certainly would be nice if a candidate married his high school sweetheart and was faithful his entire life, for me at least, a divorce isn’t a deal breaker. I voting for the best leader, not husband of the year...


7 posted on 11/18/2011 8:13:02 AM PST by apillar
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To: SeekAndFind

IMHO, the GOP needs a teacher to educate the American people how corrupt our government has become.
Newt could be that man.

SEIU infiltration into local governments.
Acorn infiltration into local elections.
Stock market manipulation by elected officials.
Green movement being used as a slush fund for the DNC.
Communist party gaining power within the DNC.

Again IMHO, these things are far more important than if Newt is a Christian or how many times he’s been divorced.


8 posted on 11/18/2011 8:14:52 AM PST by Zathras
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To: SeekAndFind

I speak ONLY for this Evangelical. I hope he is sincere. I hope he is forgiven. Heaven knows I am a nothing in the eyes of God and not about to weigh in on his eternal judgment. But ...

Will I vote for him? Never, ever.


9 posted on 11/18/2011 8:15:18 AM PST by RIghtwardHo
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To: annieokie

Good enough for me, Newt. I am also a humble Christian. Can’t STAND the hypocritical types who are the first to throw stones.

Sometimes those who have strayed the most can end up with the most powerful Christian testimonies. It’s not our place to judge.


10 posted on 11/18/2011 8:15:47 AM PST by LibsRJerks
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To: SeekAndFind

Let me see if I follow the logic... we should dump Perry because we dissagree with him on one issue, and we should dump Cain because a few liberals accused him of being flirtatous.

And we should choose someone we dissagree with on lots of issues, who has a admitted history of infildelity and is on her 3rd wife...

got it.

lol


11 posted on 11/18/2011 8:15:47 AM PST by TexasFreeper2009 (Cain 2012!)
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To: annieokie
Forgiveness strikes right to the heart of Christianity....I am compelled to take him at his word until he shows his unworthiness. So I for one am not going to hold his past moral transgressions against him. Of course everything else is fair game. It is telling that none of the other candidates are attacking him on this issue only the MSM and freepers.
12 posted on 11/18/2011 8:21:24 AM PST by ontap
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To: ontap

Forgiveness is between him and the lord. Trust is another matter, he cheated on his wives. Therefore, I don’t trust him.


13 posted on 11/18/2011 8:24:50 AM PST by JohnKinAK
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To: SeekAndFind

What’s an ‘Evangelical’ ?

I never heard of that term before it was made up in the 2000s or so. Sounds like Evangelical means Christian.


14 posted on 11/18/2011 8:25:07 AM PST by AlmaKing
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To: SeekAndFind

Who will cast the first stone?


15 posted on 11/18/2011 8:29:48 AM PST by HotKat (Politicians are like diapers; they need to be changed often and for the same reason. Mark Twain)
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To: AlmaKing

RE: What’s an ‘Evangelical’ ?

As per Wikipedia...

Evangelicalism is a Protestant Christian movement which began in Great Britain in the 1730’s and gained popularity in the United States during the series of Great Awakenings of the 18th and 19th century.

Its key commitments are:

* The need for personal conversion and repentance (or being “born again”);

* A high regard for biblical authority;

* An emphasis on teachings that proclaim the saving death and resurrection of the Son of God, Jesus Christ;

* Actively expressing and sharing the gospel.

These four distinctive aspects conversionism, biblicism, crucicentrism, and evangelism together form a quadrilateral of priorities that is the basis of Evangelicalism.


16 posted on 11/18/2011 8:31:46 AM PST by SeekAndFind (u)
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To: AlmaKing

evangelical comes straight from the Biblical greek.

it was not “made up” recently.


17 posted on 11/18/2011 8:32:43 AM PST by ken21
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To: JohnKinAK
I have no problem with that,that your decision to make.
18 posted on 11/18/2011 8:35:23 AM PST by ontap
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To: SeekAndFind

He found that women are especially wary of Gingrich.

They’re right. They are so much better off with a guy who supports Sharia supporting Muslim countries and organizations in the U.S. as President.

(Saracsm)


19 posted on 11/18/2011 8:35:37 AM PST by ZULU (Anybody but Romney or Huntsman)
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To: GeronL

Same.

But Newt is also a serial adulterer. This man has the character of Bill Clinton. Not someone I would like to have back in the White house.


20 posted on 11/18/2011 8:37:24 AM PST by CSI007
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