Religion
Related: About this forumReligious Right’s plan for beating Obama
Faith and Freedom Coalition, "a 21st-century version of the Christian Coalition on steroids," is leading the effort
BY ADELE M. STAN,
A mere 10 days since Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and Lieutenant Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch survived the recall election launched against them by states liberal coalition, Ralph Reed, chairman of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, is ebullient as he takes the stage at his organizations Washington, D.C., gala on the final night of FFCs national conference at the Renaissance Hotel.
Reed has good reason to be happy; his return to the religious-right spotlight is a turn of events that few would have bet on. Since he first burst on the political scene in the 1990s as the wunderkind executive director of Rev. Pat Robertsons Christian Coalition, Reeds political trajectory took him so close to the sun that his wings nearly melted. When George W. Bush signed him as a strategist for the 2000 presidential campaign, Reeds career soared only to crash four years later with revelations of his involvement in the Jack Abramoff scandal. Along the way, he made a lot of money, and is reported to live with his wife and two of his four children (the other two are grown) in a house in Duluth, Ga., worth $2.2 million.
The boyish contours of his face now marked with the occasional line, Reed, at 51, still conveys a youthful vigor, fit and trim in a well-tailored dark suit, with his full head of hair brushed neatly back to display a smooth forehead. Taking no small measure of credit for the triumph of Walker and Kleefisch, Reed boasts of the 600,000 voter contacts he says his organization made to get conservative Wisconsinites to the polls on June 5. Later that evening, Reed will present to Kleefisch, who is billed as Wisconsins answer to Sarah Palin, FFCs Courage in Leadership Award. (Kleefisch will also accept the same award for Walker, who did not attend.)
If you like what happened in Wisconsin, Reed implies, youre going to love the 2012 presidential race, when FFC reaches out to 27.1 million conservative voters; he promises that FFC will contact each of them between seven to 12 times to either get them to the polls, or better yet, vote early in states that permit it. Consider it payback, if you will, for the outcome of the 2008 presidential election.
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jonthebru
(1,034 posts)The religious right is wrong in supporting the corporatist oligarchy. The lack of compassion and support of those "without" by the mega churches is selfish.