Romney’s “Faith in America” Speech: Changing The Discussion Forever
John and I were on Hugh Hewitt’s show Friday for a few minutes and Hugh asked us if we thought The Speech put The Question to bed. We didn’t have time to answer fully.
On reflection, I think what has happened is that Romney has irrevocably and forever changed the discussion about The Question. (K-Lo seems to agree.)
As John notes below, Romney has drawn a line in the sand, and everyone watching this race — candidates, commentators, or voters– will need to decide which side they are on.
Why? Because Romney has taken the high ground on the issue of religion. From this point on, the following statements from his “Faith in America” speech will guide the discussion:
1. “Freedom requires religion just as religion requires freedom.”
This bold and provocative assertion is a fine example of the line in the sand John references. It has already drawn attack from the left, and probably will as long as Romney is in the race. As for the other Republican candidates, especially Huckabee, they are reduced to saying “me, too.” Romney has occupied the space around the question of religion’s role in civic life. The others can join him in that space, but he was the first to go there.
2. “A person should not be elected because of his faith nor should he be rejected because of his faith.”
An even bolder line in the sand. Can anyone be on the other side of this one? Yes, but no one can stand there without first doing some pretty fancy tap-dancing. To argue that a candidate should be rejected because of his or her faith requires a lot of careful parsing of words and qualification of positions. Can any Republican candidate contradict Romney here? It doesn’t seem so; Huckabee, after insistent questioning by Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday today, and despite frantic wriggling, was finally forced to concede the point.
3. “As governor, I tried to do the right as best I knew it, serving the law and answering to the Constitution. I did not confuse the particular teachings of my church with the obligations of the office and of the Constitution – and of course, I would not do so as President. I will put no doctrine of ay church above the plain duties of the office and the sovereign authority of the law.”
This is one issue that truly is dead after this speech. Any serious candidate who challenges Romney on this point will be reduced to saying that Romney is simply lying – a very difficult burden to carry.
4. “Some believe that such a confession of my faith will sink my candidacy. If they are right, so be it. But I think they underestimate the American people.”
Can you see Mitt Romney, way up there on the high ground? The Dick Morrises of the world, who insist the GOP should not and will not nominate Romney because nominating a Mormon would be to hand the election to the Democrats, now look very small-minded indeed.
5. “I believe Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Savior of Mankind. My church’s beliefs about Christ may not all be the same as those of other faiths. Each religion has its own unique doctrines and history. These are not bases for criticism but rather a test of our tolerance. Religious tolerance would be a shallow principle indeed if it were reserved only for faiths with which we agree.”
Of course there will be some who want to say, “Yes, but Romney believes in a different Jesus than the Jesus of the Bible.” They are free to do so, but those who will vote based on that concern are a small minority in any event, and look . . . well, small in making that argument. (There’s Romney again, up there on the high moral ground. Get used to it, everyone.)
6. “No candidate should become the spokesman for his faith. For if he becomes president he will need the prayers of the people of all faiths.”This is a brilliant two-line argument. Romney makes an entirely reasonable assertion, one that almost everyone will accept: Candidates don’t and shouldn’t speak for their churches. Then he makes that assertion an imperative of leadership and unity: The president needs everyone’s prayers, because we’re all in this together as people of faith.
Of course Huckabee is eager to say that he will speak for his faith and the other candidates should speak for theirs. Which approach do you think will wear best with the electorate-Romney’s high-mindedness or Huckabee’s cynical slickness?
7. “It is important to recognize that while differences in theology exist between the churches in America, we share a common creed of moral convictions.”
The reference to a “creed” is a bit sly; many Evangelicals emphasize that Mormonism’s rejection of the great Christian creeds separates the Latter-day Saints from orthodox Christianity, and the LDS readily agree. But Romney is once again up there on the mountaintop, urging ‘religious people,” in civic affairs, to focus on what unites us more than what divides us. Again, no one can challenge this without looking small; no one can agree without being in a “me too” position.
8. “Perhaps the most important question to ask a person of faith who seeks political office, is this: does he share these American values: the equality of human kind, the obligation to serve one another, and a steadfast commitment to liberty?
“These are not unique to any one denomination. They belong to the great moral inheritance we hold in common. They are the firm ground on which Americans of different faiths meet and stand as a nation.”
This is the kind of language that will end up chiseled on the walls of the W. Mitt Romney Presidential Library, if there ever is one. They are presidential words. As John remarked to me while we filed out of the auditorium at the Bush Library, Romney was speaking to the nation the way a president does.
Going forward, any discussion of The Question will be framed by the statements above, as well as the other marked Romney laid down about secularism — markers no other candidate in this election, Republican or Democrat, has even mentioned seriously yet.
With this one speech Romney has gone from being the punching bag on religious issues to the thought leader on those same issues. It’s an impressive tour de force. If you’ll forgive a purely partisan statement, based on what I know about Mitt Romney, I have a hunch we’ll see more of this kind of leadership as the campaign unfolds.
Posted in Electability, Notables, Religious Bigotry, The Speech | 4 Comments » |
Print this post
|
Email This Post

mapletree on 10 Dec 2007 at 1:22 am #
In light of Romney’s speech, I’d like you people at Article 6 Blog to reconsider the argument you’ve been making against pragmatists who have opposed nominating Romney because he will face religious bigotry in the general election, which damages his electability. Your argument has been that denying the nomination to someone on this grounds isn’t nice.
I will tell you that I am an ardent Romney supporter, and yet I am a pragmatist. I think you should drop this argument. Has it convinced anyone? You’re saying, “Republicans should nominate a loser because it’s the right thing to do.” I have read all your moralizing and philosophizing on this issue, and it hasn’t impressed me one bit. I don’t believe in nominating losers. Do you? Really?
No, all along your argument should have been that Romney IS electable. And this speech he gave hopefully will inspire you to that more effective argument. Yes, there is religious bigotry out there. Yes, there are people who say they won’t vote for Romney because of his religion. But Romney is a very effective campaigner, a very likable person, and he will win over the people. Even the evangelicals.
In fact, while I think that several of the Republican candidates could win the general election, depending on how the campaign goes, I believe that Mitt has the only real chance of pulling off a landslide victory. Once he gets people’s ear, many of them love him.
So dump your philosophizing and moralizing, please, and come back to the real world of politics.
- Dave Hall
President, Mapletree Publishing Company
Denver, Colorado
madison on 10 Dec 2007 at 11:26 am #
“The reference to a “creed” is a bit sly; many Evangelicals emphasize that Mormonism’s rejection of the great Christian creeds separates the Latter-day Saints from orthodox Christianity, and the LDS readily agree.”
As if the Mormons’ own statement that “Christianity fell into apostasy but was restored by the prophet Joseph Smith” (again, a statement from http://lds.org) does not separate them from Christianity.
“But Romney is a very effective campaigner, a very likable person, and he will win over the people. Even the evangelicals.”
The guy has been blanketing Iowa and New Hampshire with visits and TV commercials for HOW LONG and still hasn’t been able to pull away? And what is Romney now nationally? Like, third? Behind Rudy Giuliani of all people? If it weren’t for the “Romney is facing anti – Mormon bigotry from evangelicals” copout, people would be talking about how BADLY Romney is faring. Again, this is why Romney’s decision to court evangelicals was bad to begin with. Evangelicals are only in the GOP because of social conservatism to begin with, and evangelicals feel like they were lied to by not only George W. Bush, but the Republican Congress, who took their votes and gave them nothing in terms of a social agenda. Those guys are not going to go for a one term governor who was for abortion and gay rights before he was against it.
Mitt only had a shot when the race was between him and Giulani, forcing evangelicals to choose between a guy with a strong pro – abortion record and a pro – business guy with no real social conservative credentials. When a guy with legitimate social conservative credentials started making a push, what else were they supposed to do?
I keep telling you folks, Mitt needs to give up on the social conservative/evangelical crowd and start competing with Giuliani for the moderate/secular voters. Fred Thompson and John McCain dropping out after New Hampshire will give him an opening to go after their voters. The question is: will they take it?
Blogs for Mitt » Blog Archive » Monday News Roundup on 10 Dec 2007 at 12:32 pm #
[...] VI’s Lowell Brown runs down the highlights of Mitt’s “Faith In America” [...]
Article VI Blog » Is The Question Dead? and other news… on 11 Dec 2007 at 6:40 am #
[...] Romney’s “Faith in America” Speech: Changing The Discussion Forever | Quick Links – 12/10/07 » [...]