Evangelical Christians are already beginning the process of selecting
the Republican presidential candidate whom they can anoint as
their successor to George W. Bush. Somehow, evangelicals have
this deluded idea that President Bush is one of them. How they
came to this delusion both fascinates and escapes me. Bush is
anything but one of them. However, most evangelicals believe he
is, and today it seems that illusion is greater than reality,
anyway. Bush proves that more than anyone I have ever known. But
enough about Bush.
The question burning in the minds of evangelicals today is: Which
Republican candidate for president will we anoint? There are several
possibilities, but apparently Congressman Ron Paul is not one
of them.
For example, Jerry Falwell's widely distributed National Liberty
Journal, in its March 2007 edition, had a major section entitled
"Campaign 2008-Identifying the Republican Presidential Candidates."
A total of ten Republicans made the Journal's list. The ten listed
were Sen. Sam Brownback, Newt Gingrich, Rudy Giuliani, Sen. Chuck
Hagel, Gov. Mike Huckabee, Rep. Duncan Hunter, Sen. John McCain,
Gov. George Pataki, Gov. Mitt Romney, and Rep. Tom Tancredo.
However, even though Rep. Ron Paul has also formed a presidential
exploratory committee (something Gingrich has not even done yet),
his name was conspicuously absent from Falwell's list. Why is
this? Why do evangelicals ignore Ron Paul?
Ron Paul received his Bachelor's degree from Gettysburg College.
He received his MD from Duke University. He began his OB/GYN career
in 1968. He was also an Air Force Captain and a member of the
Air National Guard.
Ron Paul has served as a conservative congressman from Texas
for over 16 years. He currently has a 100% rating from The Conservative
Index, which is probably the most relevant and accurate reflection
of a congressman's true conservative record out there.
Furthermore, unlike most Republicans, Paul's commitment to the
life issue is more than rhetoric. For example, during the 2005
congressional session, Rep. Paul introduced H.R. 776, entitled
the "Sanctity of Life Act of 2005."
Had it passed, H.R. 776 would have recognized the personhood
of all unborn babies by declaring, "human life shall be deemed
to exist from conception." The bill also recognized the authority
of each State to protect the lives of unborn children. In addition,
H.R. 776 would have removed abortion from the jurisdiction of
the Supreme Court, thereby nullifying the Roe v Wade decision,
and would have denied funding for abortion providers. In plain
language, H.R. 776 would have ended abortion on demand. (It is
more than interesting to me that none of the evangelicals' pet
politicians, including George W. Bush, even bothered to support
Paul's pro-life bill.)
In addition, Ron Paul has been the most outspoken defender of
constitutional government in the entire congress-bar none. He
has often stood virtually alone against federal abuse of power,
corruption, and big government.
Currently, Ron Paul is one of only a handful of congressmen that
dares speak out against the emerging North American Union, NAFTA
superhighway, and the Security and Prosperity Partnership agreement,
all of which are being promoted by the White House in concert
with the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR).
Speaking of the CFR, two of the U.S. senators listed as presidential
candidates in Jerry Falwell's Liberty Journal, Chuck Hagel and
John McCain, are current members of the CFR.
For his entire political career, Ron Paul has served foursquare
upon the principles of constitutional (limited) government, less
taxation, right to life, and personal liberty. Ron Paul is a conservative's
conservative, a principled constitutionalist of the finest order.
How is it, then, that Jerry Falwell and other evangelicals ignore
him?
The answer to the above question is not easy to determine. Maybe
today's evangelicals are more concerned about being accepted by
the GOP establishment than they are supporting principled, conservative
candidates. After all, Paul's willingness to openly oppose his
own party has caused him to be blacklisted by party loyalists
and apologists. Therefore, it might be that our illustrious evangelical
leaders are unwilling to be identified with Paul lest they share
the same ostracism.
Another reason might be that today's evangelicals are extremely
shallow in their discernment. They seem to love Republican candidates
who wear religion on their sleeve. Whether the candidate walks
the walk does not seem to matter near as much as whether he talks
the talk.
Hence, evangelicals are already warming up to John McCain, Newt
Gingrich, Mitt Romney, and even to Rudy Giuliani. Falwell's National
Liberty Journal (NLJ) calls Gingrich "a true American statesman."
McCain is called "pro-life." Already, McCain has spoken
for Dr. Falwell at his Liberty University. (Don't be surprised
if Falwell becomes one of McCain's strongest proponents.) The
NLJ quotes Evangelicals for Mitt as saying, "Gov. Romney
. . . shares our values." Of Giuliani, NLJ states, "On
issues such as national security, battling terrorism and combating
crime, Mr. Giuliani is very popular with conservatives."
However, the truth is, neither Gingrich, Giuliani, Romney, nor
McCain deserves the support of principled conservatives. Each
of these men has numerous examples of failure and compromise of
essential conservative values.
Another trap evangelicals seem to fall into is the puerile desire
to "pick a winner." Wanting to be sure that they are
seen dancing with the last man on the floor, evangelicals are
trying to figure out who that man will be so as to be ready to
receive their invitation to the dance. And since they don't expect
to see Ron Paul issuing dance invitations, they have already written
him off.
However, rather than letting themselves be used as dupes by the
GOP machine, if America's evangelicals would determine to stand
on principle by supporting only those candidates who most courageously
champion our principles (regardless of their popularity, or lack
thereof, with the Republican hierarchy), they might actually be
able to bring real change to American politics.
As it is, evangelicals continue to call George W. Bush "one
of us," they continue to drink Kool Aid from the faucet of
Republican propaganda, and they continue to ignore Ron Paul.