Can Pawlenty Win Evangelicals and Moderates (Unlike Palin and Huckabee)?

July 30, 2009 RSS Feed Print

By Dan Gilgoff, God & Country

It's striking that today's Associated Press profile of Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, a possible 2012 Republican presidential candidate, excludes mention of his evangelical faith and strong ties to the evangelical world. I was struck by the same absence in a recent New York Times Pawlenty profile.

How solid are Pawlently's evangelical bona fides? The pastor of his home church is president of the National Association of Evangelicals, the nation's largest evangelical interest. Last year, as John McCain struggled to win over evangelical leaders, Pawlently quietly tried to arrange a meeting between the Republican presidential nominee and National Association of Evangelical bigs, but to no avail.

Around that time, the Minnesota Independent covered some of Pawlenty's faith-based policies: 

It's hard not to see the fingerprints of Pawlenty's pastor in his public policy initiatives. Much to the chagrin of other members of Minnesota's Republican Party, Pawlenty has recently had a come-to-Jesus moment on global warming—perhaps literally. Pawlenty has been championing strategies to reduce carbon emissions as chairman of the National Governors Association over the last year and half. Perhaps not coincidentally, [Leith] Anderson, Pawlenty's pastor, five years ago began encouraging evangelicals to get involved in global warming mitigation in order to preserve "God's gift of our earth." Pawlenty even appointed Anderson to his Minnesota Climate Change Advisory Group.

Such appointments of evangelicals have been one way Pawlenty has put his faith to the test during his administration. After he appointed Cheri Pierson Yecke as education commissioner, she told Minnesota Public Radio, "Every local district should have the freedom to teach creationism, if that is what they choose." She also moved to beef up social studies and history curriculum with quotes from figures in American history about God and Christians. Yecke was ousted by the Minnesota Senate in 2004. . . .

Pawlenty's political career before becoming governor included eight years in the Minnesota House. . . . [W]hile Pawlenty voted for the Minnesota Human Rights Act of 1993 that prohibited discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, while running for his first term as governor he said it was the one vote he would take back.

Unlike prospective Republican White House contenders like Mike Huckabee and Sarah Palin, Pawlenty doesn't talk like a culture warrior, which helps explain why Pawlenty coverage in the national media ignores his faith-based side. But can his less strident tone help him win independents in a way that Huckabee and Palin have failed to, while his evangelical side makes him a hit with the GOP's social conservative base?

Tags:
evangelicals,
Tim Pawlenty,
religion

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Mssachusetts employers pay the highest premiums in the country to cover their employees. There is not a nickel's difference in Romneycare and Obamacare. Both forced people into an insurance plan or fines them if they don't get one. Both claim to get everybody insured (and neither are/will be successful).

Both claimed to lower costs. Wrong. Both paid for abortions on demand.

No to Romneycare, Obamacare, and vote No to both candidates in 2012.

David Shedlock of IA 3:39PM August 07, 2009

The millions raised by Mitt and his campaign of 2008 was used to attack his fellow candidates. He attacked McCain as moderate and so denied McCain the support of the establishment republicans during the general campaign. Mitt is a barking Mad Dog with no clear plans for America except the boastful declaration of him being a CEO of Bain Capital (exactly responsible for outsourcing jobs to China to amass his wealth), and being a failed governor of Massachussetts. He is the Limbaugh type that simply attacks with no clear alternatives.

Wake up America! Have some common sense! Huckabee for President!

All for Huck! of DC 7:14PM July 31, 2009

Until he goes through the same vetting process as did Mitt Romney, I am still supporting Mitt Romney 2012...he is already into finger pointing without proper information as Huckabee is famous for..I want truths, not lies or lies of omission.Mitt is seasoned and mature and a proven success..Mitt will follow the Constitution and knows Numbers..A businessman is needed...Private sector success...with His dime....Morally sound..Wake up America....

Paulee Willette of ME 3:26PM July 31, 2009

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Dan Gilgoff covers religion for U.S. News & World Report. He is the author of The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family, and Evangelical America are Winning the Culture War, and is a former politics editor at beliefnet. E-mail Dan at godandcountry@usnews.com.

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