By Christopher Orlet on 2.14.08 @ 12:08AM
The real reason Mitt Romney went down in flames.
Civil War-era humorist Artemus Ward joked that in Utah everyone
marries Young. Today in Utah everyone votes Romney, but elsewhere
in the republic they have their suspicions.
It now seems undeniable that religion played the key role in
Mitt Romney's failure to win the Republican nomination or, for that
matter, to finish a close second. Curiously religion was a greater
factor in Mitt's candidacy than it was in his father's run for the
White House in 1967.
Romney the Elder came a cropper when he made a career-ending
comment about being "brainwashed" into supporting the Vietnam War.
As for his faith, the New York Times recently
noted that "Attention to George Romney's membership in the
Mormon Church concentrated on its policy at the time of excluding
blacks from full participation. Today, the conservative Christian
movement is focusing scrutiny on Mormon theology itself."
Byron York, writing in National Review, isn't buying it. York downplays the role of
religion in the campaign, insisting that Romney lost largely
because he was a politician from "Taxachusetts," and no
right-thinking conservative would trust a politico from Ted
Kennedyland. What is more, Romeny would adopt just about any
position to get the GOP nomination, principles be damned.
Still it is hard to know for sure. There were no polls asking
whether voters would consider supporting a Massachusetts
Republican; there were, however, polls asking whether voters would
consider a Mormon president.
By the response, it seems the old suspicion and prejudice of
Mormonism that drove a pack of Illinoisans to butcher U.S.
presidential candidate Joseph Smith remains alive and well. Many
Americans consider Mormonism a cult, and in no way a Christian
denomination. Privately they will say that Mormons have some very
strange practices. Maybe even horns.
Those not suspicious or creeped out joke about Mormon underwear,
multiple mothers-in-law, and how the Garden of Eden is supposed to
be located somewhere in Missouri. (This is no laughing matter. I
work in Missouri, and in fact I'm looking out my window at Eden
right now.)
MIKE HUCKABEE STOKED the fires of paranoia in a New York Times
Magazine story when he asked, "Don't Mormons believe that
Jesus and the devil are brothers?" One-time presidential candidate
the Reverend Al Sharpton spoke for many true believers when he
said, "As for the one Mormon running for office, those who really
believe in God will defeat him anyway."
Bill Keller, host of the Florida-based Live Prayer TV
warned his reported 2.4 million e-mail subscribers that a vote for
Romney would mean a vote for -- you guess it -- Beelzebub. "The
presidency is the most powerful position in the world," Keller
told American Spectator contributor
Carrie Sheffield. "If Romney was elected president, it would give
mainstream credibility and acceptance to the Mormon cult and lead
millions of people into that cult."
Finally, there was the alleged push polling by the Utah-based
company Western Wats that asked Iowa and New Hampshire residents
whether they knew that Romney was a Mormon, that he received
military deferments when he served as a Mormon missionary, that his
faith did not accept African-Americans as bishops into the 1970s,
and that Mormons believe the Book of Mormon is superior to the
Bible.
While most of these remarks were condemned, they nonetheless
said volumes about how Mormonism is regarded by many Americans.
"I don't think any of us had any idea how much anti-Mormon stuff
was out there," LDS Spokesman Armand Mauss told the Wall Street Journal. A recent
WSJ poll found that half of American voters voiced "some
reservations" (29 percent) or were "very uncomfortable" (21
percent) with even the thought of having a Mormon in the White
House.
Last month Beliefnet asked evangelicals whether a candidate's
religious beliefs would make them more or less likely to vote for a
particular candidate: 35.6 percent of conservative evangelicals
said Romney's religious beliefs would make them less likely to support him.
It wasn't just evangelical Republicans. The survey showed that
nearly as many Democrats would vote against Romney because of his
religion.
INTELLECTUALS JOINED IN on what was beginning to look like an old
fashioned witch hunt. Slate magazine contributor
Christopher Hitchens demanded that Romney answer for the racist
past of his faith. "His church was officially racist until 1965,
believing that black people were an inferior species," Hitchens
fumed, while Slate editor Jacob Weisberg said that the
religion's founder Joseph Smith was an obvious con man, and that
"Romney has every right to believe in con men, but I want to know
if he does, and if so, I don't want him running the country."
What else besides Romney's faith can explain the ex-governor's
poor showing? Romney had the solid backing not only of conservative
pundits and politicians, but he had the overwhelming endorsement of
Big Talk Radio, including Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham,
Mark Levin, Rush Limbaugh and Michael Savage. These hosts were, and
are, rabidly anti-McCain and Huckabee.
Now with Mitt Romney's departure Republicans have two liberal
Baptists to choose from, neither one with a small government bone
in his body. Is it possible that evangelical Republicans were so
anti-Mormon that they cut a deal with the devil?
That's a turn of phrase, unless one seriously suspects that
Huckabee or McCain is the devil. Apparently some true believers
believed Romney was.
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