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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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To: JohnKinAK

Well of course you haven’t. I’ll bet you’re very careful in that regard, even erasing the porn from your computer every time you shut it down.


61 posted on 11/19/2011 8:33:33 AM PST by MHGinTN (Some, believing they cannot be deceived, it's impossible to convince them when they're deceived.)
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To: MHGinTN

http://www.votesmart.org/candidate/biography/53176


62 posted on 11/19/2011 8:35:27 AM PST by org.whodat (Just another heartless American, hated by "AMNESTY" Perry and his fellow demorats.)
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To: CynicalBear

You are talking about God. That is VERY different from me. So if you forgive the pedophile and you don’t let him into your home with your kids is that wrong? Of course not.

Your equivalence is a fault one.

And I still will never vote for Gingrich.


63 posted on 11/19/2011 8:42:33 AM PST by RIghtwardHo
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To: C. Edmund Wright
Just for some facts of Biblical figures paying for their failings, in response to you bringing it up:

Samson paid a heavy price. Blindness, etc.

So did David, his son died.

Moses, for striking a rock instead of speaking to it to supply water, was not allowed to enter the promised land.

Things to consider.

64 posted on 11/19/2011 9:02:03 AM PST by Syncro (Sarah Palin, the unofficial Tea Party candidate for president--Virtual Jerusalem)
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To: Syncro

You are of course 100% correct - but I mention a couple of ideas that allow me to stand by my point:

They were all still used mightily - and Newt has already paid some heavy prices for some of his transgressions as well.

Interesting discussion BTW....


65 posted on 11/19/2011 9:04:59 AM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Moderator of Florida Tea Party Convention Presidential Debate)
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To: C. Edmund Wright

None any where near what the people I mentioned experienced.

My point is that his past may prevent him from becoming President.

Here’s an interesting site for a bio of Gingrich

http://usconservatives.about.com/od/champions/p/NewtGingrichBIO.htm


66 posted on 11/19/2011 9:48:33 AM PST by Syncro (Sarah Palin, the unofficial Tea Party candidate for president--Virtual Jerusalem)
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To: MHGinTN
The stench of hypocrisy wafting off your posts is getting potent

Odd when you were racing around here trash talking everyone not Newt, never heard a word of complaint about “circular firing squads”

Guess is is only helping the enemy when we ask tough questions about your St Newt hmm?

67 posted on 11/19/2011 9:53:09 AM PST by MNJohnnie (Giving more money to DC to fix the Debt is like giving free drugs to addicts think it will cure them)
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To: Syncro

His past may indeed keep him from becoming President. Or not. From a Biblical perspective, you could make both cases. I humbly submit both are possible and simply disagree with those who say that his past is an automatic disqualifier.

I would also point to the fact that there is a lot of good in his past. In fact, in all of his PC or liberal dalliances, none of it led to substantive negative change. Meanwhile, the Contract w America congress led to some great positive change.


68 posted on 11/19/2011 9:53:58 AM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Moderator of Florida Tea Party Convention Presidential Debate)
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To: Logical me
No the problem is the Newtbots attempts to rewrite history and air brush out all his failures.

Love the way the Newtbots want to rewrite history and assign credit to Newt for things he was only marginally involved in.

Then they want to just skip right past the point that his supposed accomplishments are all almost 20 years in the past while his transgressions are all much more recent.

69 posted on 11/19/2011 9:59:29 AM PST by MNJohnnie (Giving more money to DC to fix the Debt is like giving free drugs to addicts think it will cure them)
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To: SeekAndFind
Newt is not in trouble over his personal morality, it is his situational political morality Conservatives are worried about.
70 posted on 11/19/2011 10:01:45 AM PST by MNJohnnie (Giving more money to DC to fix the Debt is like giving free drugs to addicts think it will cure them)
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To: All

Please Donate!!
FReepathon Day 50!!

71 posted on 11/19/2011 10:03:24 AM PST by onyx (PLEASE SUPPORT FREE REPUBLIC BY DONATING NOW! Sarah's New Ping List - tell me if you want on it.)
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To: C. Edmund Wright
Yes the Contract was a good thing

I was disappointed that he did not follow through on all of it.

It's too bad he allowed himself to be pushed out of the speakership, and then resign congress after just being elected again.

As far as his liberal “dalliances,” I think they are very important.

I think if he is nominated that Obama will pee his pants at the thought of debating Gingrich. The sissy will probably not grant debates.

: > )

72 posted on 11/19/2011 10:03:56 AM PST by Syncro (Sarah Palin, the unofficial Tea Party candidate for president--Virtual Jerusalem)
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To: Syncro

I agree with most of that...


73 posted on 11/19/2011 10:05:10 AM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Moderator of Florida Tea Party Convention Presidential Debate)
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To: MrEdd
Kind of like how few people care about Mitt’s Mormonism as compared to Romneycare.

A lot more people care about Mitt's mormonism than you think, and God forbid, if he gets the nomination, you'll see the MSM taking a long look at mormonism and making sure that everybody knows Mitt's a mormon.
74 posted on 11/19/2011 10:05:43 AM PST by af_vet_rr
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To: C. Edmund Wright

You’re free to stay off the forum if you feel nauseus.


75 posted on 11/19/2011 10:09:03 AM PST by Moorings
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To: C. Edmund Wright

LOL, oh OK

heh


76 posted on 11/19/2011 10:11:33 AM PST by Syncro (Sarah Palin, the unofficial Tea Party candidate for president--Virtual Jerusalem)
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To: Moorings

>>> You’re free to stay off the forum if you feel nauseus. >>>

Yep. And I am free to stay on and put up with the nausea, and tell you that you too are free to stay away if my nausea bothers you.


77 posted on 11/19/2011 10:12:49 AM PST by C. Edmund Wright (Moderator of Florida Tea Party Convention Presidential Debate)
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To: SeekAndFind

God hates divorce, yes, but the final straw for not forgiving Israel was when their streets flowed with the blood of the innocent during their child sacrificing days. Judgment was postponed but not cancelled.

Vote pro-life.


78 posted on 11/19/2011 10:13:07 AM PST by huldah1776
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To: MHGinTN; JohnKinAK
JohnKinAK is not running for the presidency of the U.S.

Just because we all sin does not mean we turn a blind eye to sin. For many people Newt's personal lack of self control and repeated unfaithfulness is cause for concern on how they as his voters will be treated after the election is all done.

Attacking someone over those concerns is not going to make them go away.

79 posted on 11/19/2011 10:14:13 AM PST by Moorings
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To: C. Edmund Wright

Your nausea does not bother me. Go ahead knock yourself out.


80 posted on 11/19/2011 10:14:52 AM PST by Moorings
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