
Photo by Scot Facer Proctor
Super Tuesday is behind us, and watching Mitt
Romney’s inability to penetrate the South — he consistently
came in third place after McCain and Huckabee — raises the
question that has haunted his campaign from the beginning. Is
this hum-drum showing in the Bible Belt a reflection of religious
bias? Or is it merely identity politics, because evangelical voters
like to vote for somebody who just looks like them and Mike Huckabee
was there to fill the bill?
The question matters because the prospects
of any conservative winning the presidency without carrying the
largely Evangelical South are small. Should Latter-day Saints,
then, who are mostly conservative, not tell their children what
every other American does, “You, too, can grow up and be
president”?
On the one hand, according to the
Boston Globe, “nationally Huckabee, Romney and
Senator John McCain roughly split the evangelical vote, exit polls
showed yesterday. But in the South, the vote among Christian conservatives
was significant, and Huckabee drew the largest percentage of them
by far.”
It is also the case that Romney won a few
endorsements from Evangelical leaders such as Traditional Values
Coalition leader, Lou Sheldon, but many more, whose values line
up with Romney’s just wrung their hands and said they couldn’t
find their candidate. Romney was invisible to them — not
an option.
Last night pundits at The Corner,
the blog at National Review, thought the Mormon question
was significant. John O’Sullivan said, “My southern
belle wife always warned me that many evangelicals would vote
for anyone but a Mormon.”
Mark Steyn said, “There was an explicit
anti-Romney vote in the South. A mere month ago, in the wake of
Iowa and New Hampshire, I received a ton of emails from southern
readers saying these pansy northern states weren’t the ‘real’
conservative heartland, and things would look different once the
contest moved to the South. Well, the heartland spoke last night
and about the only message it sent was that, no matter what the
talk radio guys say, they’re not voting for a Mormon, no
way, no how.”
This talk brings to mind an article
that Amy Sullivan, now a Time magazine editor, wrote
in September 2005 in the Washington Monthly magazine
called “Mitt Romney’s Evangelical Problem.”
Just before she wrote the article, several
major conservative news outlets had featured positive stories
on Romney as a possible presidential candidate, which made her
marvel, for though Americans had apparently become more religiously
tolerant, she had vivid memories of the day she first learned
about Mormonism and she assumed that thousands of children, just
like her, had learned the same lessons.
She wrote, “The first time I ever heard
about Mormons was in fifth grade, sitting in a basement classroom
of my Baptist church, watching a filmstrip about cults. Our Sunday
school class was covering a special month-long unit on false religions;
in the mail-order curriculum, Mormonism came somewhere between
devil worshippers and Jim Jones.
“Although most of the particulars are
lost to me now, one of the images remains in my mind: a cartoon
of human figures floating in outer space (an apparent reference
to the Mormon doctrine of "eternal progression") that
appeared on the screen next to our pull-down map of Israel. Even
at age 10, the take-away message was clear. Mormons were not like
us, they were not Christian.”
She said that Evangelical opinions about Mormons
have not changed since those days 20 years ago and noted that
in 2004 Mormons were excluded from participation in the National
Day of Prayer organized by Shirley Dobson, wife of the well-known
Focus on the Family leader, James Dobson.
She guessed that, “Some of
this anti-Mormonism is a fairly fuzzy sort of bias, based mostly
on rumors and unfamiliarity and the vague feeling that Mormons
are kind of weird.”
Some of the bias is anything but fuzzy. At Pastors4Huckabee, the
effort is to make a biblical claim against voting for a Mormon
for president and claim that Christians who support Romney are
actually violating scripture.
This is certainly extreme and not reflective of all of Evangelicals,
of course, but even recently a poll found that more than four
in 10 Americans would find it difficult to vote for a Mormon.
Rodgers and Hammerstein captured how prejudice is engendered in
their South Pacific hit, when the main character laments
that she cannot marry her sweetheart because he has Polynesian
children, “You have to be carefully taught.” Apparently,
an entire segment of the population has been carefully taught
to consider Mormons pejoratively.
When asked about sentiments toward Mormons, Romney took the high
road and told Jay Leno, “I think people want a person of
faith leading the country…, but I don’t think they
select their president or their secular leader based on which
church they go to. So as I go across the country, there are probably
some who feel that way, but most believe that we should be talking
about religious tolerance and recognize that this is the nation
that has a religious liberty that is very different than the nations
we see around the world. If you’re not a Shia in some places,
you can’t be a political leader. We don’t choose our
leaders that way.”
A Cover for Bias
Still, bias takes many forms, and
though the outright Mormon blasting settled down after Romney’s
talk on religion at the Bush library, the attitude is still there,
but masked. Vanderbilt political scientist John Geer recently
said
that one of the reasons that the tag “flip-flopper”
stuck with Romney but not his Republican opponents who have also
changed their minds on critical issues lies in Romney’s
Mormon beliefs.
Geer and his colleagues, including Brett Benson,
designed an Internet survey to assess bias against Mormons and
its potential impact on the nomination process and general election
campaign.
Benson said, “We find that of those
who accuse Romney of flip-flopping, many admit it is Romney’s
Mormonism and not his flip-flopping that is the real issue. Our
survey shows that 26% of those who accuse Romney of flip-flopping
also indicate that Mormonism, not flip-flopping is their problem
with Romney.” Benson noted that the pattern is especially
strong for conservative Evangelicals. According to the poll, 57
percent of them have a bias against Mormons.
Religious bias hides behind not only the charge
of “flip-flopping” but perhaps also behind the charge
of being “too perfect.” Unbelievably, Romney has been
criticized because he mentioned that he had not had a serious
fight with his wife in their marriage. I’ve heard people
in Washington complain that they were overwhelmed and disdainful
because at one event, he filled the stage with his children and
grandchildren — “all those people who look just alike,”
as if it were not a plus.
I think Latter-day Saints have assumed that
as the nation got more exposure to Romney, religious bias would
melt away — the real person taking the place of the negative
stereotype. I would be hard-pressed to say that that has happened
as widely as we might have hoped.
As Romney’s candidacy continues, it
is undeniable that religious bias will continue to play a dominant,
though sometimes hidden role.
Something More at Play
Yet more is at play than the presidency for
Latter-day Saints. We have learned something unhappy in the last
year of presidential politicking that we never had supposed, and
it comes as a surprise in this country touted for its diversity
and generosity of spirit.
We have been bewildered, disappointed
and quite frankly surprised, as we have seen our faith excoriated
and blasted both from the left and the right in the press. It
would be laughable if it weren’t so marginalizing when we
see the press and pundits call our faith everything from “wacky”
to “spooky” to a “racket” to much worse,
like Jacob Weisberg’s caustic essay in Slate, “A
Mormon President, No Way.”
Just rephrase that to say, “A Jewish
President, No Way” or “A Black President, No Way”
to see how offensive it is.
For a season of this campaign such prejudice
was our daily fare in the press. Until last year, we thought we
were mainstream, and why not? We are the fourth largest denomination
in the United States, one of the fastest growing Christian faiths
in the world with a new chapel going up every day somewhere in
the world, and our members are founders and heads of major companies,
federal judges, members of Congress, and international leaders
in medicine, business, academia, and communications.
Studies show us to be among the healthiest
and best educated people in the world.
It is not that before this campaign we didn’t
run into occasional pockets of bigotry. Most of us have had the
experience of telling someone we were a Mormon to see them suddenly
stiffen in disapproval. We have assumed that occasional person
was an uneducated throwback to some earlier, less sophisticated
time when in small lives people were wary of differences.
To see the name calling and suspicions whipped
up by the press and some people toward The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints is not only disheartening, but it has also
been alarming. Latter-day Saints have no anti-defamation league
to protect them from prejudice.
As Christians, Latter-day Saints are taught
to be slow to take offense, but we cannot pretend that real people’s
lives are not diminished by bigotry when a nation is taught to
disdain them. As citizens of the United States, Latter-day Saints
are experiencing more soft bigotry toward us this year than at
any time in recent history. For us, this widespread response is
new.
What has been so disappointing is that very
few have stood up and said to cease and desist. Where are the
champions of tolerance in the press or in the pulpits who have
stood up and said, “Enough”? Where are all these advocates
of diversity, who find Mormonism does not deserve the same respect
as other groups in society that are handled with kid gloves?
About the best we get are those who say that
Romney’s faith shouldn’t be a problem in considering
him for President. The impression that is left is, “Because
he is so eminently well-qualified, can we hold our nose and vote
for him.”
When Mitt Romney’s father George Romney
ran for President in 1968, his Mormon faith was not a question.
Have we lost ground in finding that distant, shining shore where
people of different faiths and ethnic backgrounds are appreciated
and accepted?
If there is a lingering prejudice among some
people toward Mormons, the press does not and should not have
become their agents. At a recent conference at Princeton called
Mormonism and American Politics, Amy Sullivan said that it is
assumed that journalists are hostile to religion, but that mostly
comes from a lack of knowledge of religious traditions. The unreligious
may not do well covering religion.
It is also true that the national press does
not always do a good job with complex subjects as any faith tradition
is. How much easier and lazier it is to grab anything that sounds
strange or dramatically newsworthy and write about a religion
superficially.
Harvard law professor Noah Feldman at that
same conference said that if the liberal press had said that Romney’s
religion was irrelevant, it would largely have been considered
irrelevant.
That didn’t happen, so Mitt
apparently has had a political handicap, and not incidentally
it has reverberated back to affect all Latter-day Saints.
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