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Does Christian Coalition have a prayer in ’08?

Once-powerful organization now mired in debt, trying to regain influence

Image: Roberta Combs
Mary Ann Chastain / AP
Roberta Combs, head of the Christian Coalition of America, at her home office in Hannahan, S.C., Wednesday, says her group is regaining it's financial health and will be a big factor in the 2008 Republican presidential primary.
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updated 7:57 a.m. ET March 8, 2007

CHARLESTON, S.C. - An important ally when George W. Bush first won the presidency, the Christian Coalition of America says it’s poised again to help a conservative win the White House. Whether it can back up that pledge is an open question.

In the seven years since Bush beat John McCain en route to the Republican nomination, the coalition has spiraled into debt and its leadership has fractured. The coalition is trying to resurrect its once-vaunted influence at a time when religious conservatives are struggling to find an acceptable candidate among the leading contenders for the 2008 Republican nomination.

“Bush was just a darling, I think, of the religious right. But I think that this is going to be a different election because you don’t have a George Bush running,” said Roberta Combs, president of the South Carolina-based group that claims a mailing list of 2 million members and sends weekly e-mail blasts to 1 million potential voters.

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Among the leading GOP contenders, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani favors abortion rights and domestic partnerships for gays and has a messy marital history. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney’s Mormon faith and shifting positions on social issues have raised eyebrows of Christian fundamentalists.

And Arizona Sen. John McCain, whose loss to Bush in 2000 was helped along by the coalition after he called TV preachers Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell “agents of intolerance,” is viewed skeptically by many religious conservatives.

Even by its own admission, the coalition, which was founded by Robertson and which for years served as a key ally for conservative candidates, faces a changed landscape. Scads of other conservative Christian organizations concerned with many of the same issues, with opposition to abortion and gay marriage at the top of the list, now vie for candidate attention and may offer endorsements.

With no overarching conservative Christian group anointing a candidate, this season’s GOP primary process is “much more open, much more decentralized and, frankly, much more complicated,” said John Green, a senior fellow at the Pew Institute’s Forum on Religion and Public Life.

Influence and funding
Robertson launched the coalition as he ran for the White House in 1988. While his candidacy for the Republican nomination faltered, religious conservatives were emboldened to demand a greater voice in the GOP. Led by its charismatic and politically shrewd executive director, Ralph Reed, the coalition gained influence in the early 1990s.

After Reed stepped down in 1997 to court Christian conservative voters for Bush’s 2000 campaign, that influence began to wane. In 2001, Robertson severed ties with the coalition to concentrate on his ministry.

Randall Balmer, a religion and politics expert at Barnard College, said that when Reed left the coalition, “they lost their best strategist.”

Add to that a whiff of impropriety stemming from Reed’s ties to disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff and it shows that once-powerful Christian conservative personalities “are not the kind of moral avatars that they claim to be,” Balmer said. “The religious right is simply collapsing beneath its own weight.”

Money also has been a problem. Records show the coalition had $17,498 in cash and $1.7 million in debt at the end of 2005 after raising $2.3 million. A year earlier, it had $150,921 in cash and debt of $2.2 million, with only $1.1 million donated.


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