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Friday, October 13, 2006
Jonathan Garthwaite :: Townhall.com Columnist
Religious voters have a logical choice in November
by Jonathan Garthwaite
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With unemployment at 10.2%, what will happen by the end of Obama's first term?



It’s mid-October, which means the candidates are down to their final days to find ways to raise their own stock with the voters and cut the legs out from under their opponents. It also means plenty of surprises and scandals – and we’ve certainly had a few.

From Bob Woodward’s partisan book released in the last month of the campaign for maximum sales and political damage, to Mark Foley’s disgusting cyber-creepiness, to North Korea’s nuclear game of chicken, the 2006 midterm election results are still completely unpredictable. Recent polling has pundits guessing anywhere between a 5 and 50 seat gain for the Democrats. Not exactly definitive.

Additional polling shows troublesome evidence that evangelicals – probably the Republicans most loyal voters – are not as enamored with Republicans as they once were.

Last week, the Washington Post reported on the disenchantment:

A nationwide poll of 1,500 registered voters released yesterday by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center found that 57 percent of white evangelicals are inclined to vote for Republican congressional candidates in the midterm elections, a 21-point drop in support among this critical part of the GOP base.

Even before the Foley scandal, the portion of white evangelicals with a "favorable" impression of the Republican Party had fallen sharply this year, from 63 percent to 54 percent, according to Pew polls.

In the latest survey, taken in the last 10 days of September and the first four days of October, the percentage of evangelicals who think that Republicans govern "in a more honest and ethical way" than Democrats has plunged to 42 percent, from 55 percent at the start of the year.

There’s no doubt about it. Republicans have fallen far short of our dreams of smaller government and a culture reflective of our common values, but the alternative should be enough to shake us from our idealism.

On issues both overseas and here at home, Republicans - and more importantly, conservatives - have a logical choice.

Two stories in particular seem to be hurting Republicans right now because they are turning off usually-loyal conservatives: the war in Iraq and Mark Foley. Continued...

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About The Author

Jonathan Garthwaite is the editor-in-chief of Townhall.com.

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A dose of the morning after pill is hard
to swallow.
Republicans railed on their own, as chants of "cut and run" conservatives were blasted all over talk-radio, as fear mongering set in as the elections closed within three days of voting.
What do these typical polticians who guise themselves as conservatives expect.
No real conservatism, stands on it's own.
These politicians have left the ideas of the party, not conservatives leaving the party.
Unfortunately, the ideas of fiscal conservatism of the party, were left back in this last century.
I don't know what to call the repubs today, perhaps less liberal.
At any rate that won't do for this "tired of liberal conservatism" conservative.
Until the Repubs get back to the party ideas I'll be voting for Libertarians who definately won't compromise of fiscal responsibility.

A prioritized list.
This is how I prioitize the issues when I decide for whom to vote.

1. Sanctity of life issues, legalized abortion, embryonic stem cell research and active euthanasia.

2.


On government growth -- neither party deserves my vote.
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