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Related: About this forumJimmy Carter’s evangelical downfall: Reagan, religion and the 1980 presidential election
Jimmy Carter ushered in an era of progressive evangelicalism. But the religious right made sure it was short-livedRANDALL BALMER
Excerpted from "Redeemer: The Life of Jimmy Carter"
In October 1976, just prior to Jimmy Carters election as president, Newsweek had christened 1976 the Year of the Evangelical. Carters candidacy had introduced many Americans to the term evangelical, and his articulation of the themes of progressive evangelicalismcare for the poor, concern for human rights, and an aversion to military conflictbrought many evangelicals into the arena of politics, some of them for the first time. Nearly half of evangelical voters in 1976 favored Carter, which represented a significant increase from the showing of Democratic candidates in years past; white evangelicals, following the lead of Billy Graham and others, had generally tilted Republican in the postwar era. In 1980, four years after Carters victory, however, the evangelical vote was very much in play. Three candidates were competing for the presidency, and all three claimed to be evangelical Christians: Carter, the Democratic incumbent; Ronald Reagan, the Republican nominee; and John B. Anderson, Republican member of Congress from Illinois, running as an independent.
The political winds had shifted dramatically during Carters term in office. High inflation and soaring energy prices at home coupled with Soviet aggression and the taking of American hostages abroad had eroded his support among the general population. But Carter himself was astonished to learn that some of his fellow evangelicals were mobilizing against him. Initially distressed by the Internal Revenue Services rescission of tax exemptions for racially discriminatory schools, these evangelical leaders directed their anger toward Carter, even though the policy was formulated at the behest of Richard Nixon and enforced during Gerald Fords administration, long before Carter became president. Once Paul Weyrich and other conservative leaders had enlisted these evangelical leaders in the fight against Carter, they found that a growing evangelical uneasiness over abortion could bring grassroots evangelicals to the front lines of what was increasingly characterized as a moral crusade. By early 1980, Carter, the Southern Baptist Sunday-school teacher and husband for more than three decades, was being pilloried as an enemy of the family and traditional values.
Such was the general discontent with Carter and his presidency that few people, and not many evangelicals, rose to his defense. The Carter-Mondale campaign took it upon itself to counter the attacks from the Religious Right. I think I know President Carter better than anyone outside his immediate family, Walter Mondale told the congregation of North Christian Church in Chicago. I am with him sometimes four, five, and six hours a day. And I can tell you there is no man who is more deeply moral.
Despite attacks from the Religious Right, however, Carter was not entirely bereft of evangelical support. R. Douglas Wead, who would later serve as an adviser to both George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush, applauded the Carter campaigns sensitivity to the evangelical voter. Though she may be fickle and ungrateful at times, Wead wrote, she is coming into her own as a political force and may be your best friend in a crisis. Some observers attuned to the evangelical community expressed confidence that evangelical voters would never succumb to the rhetoric of the Religious Right, that the agenda was so blatantly at odds with progressive evangelicalism. Its all scare, Tom Getman, an aide to Mark O. Hatfield, said about the Religious Right. Its all playing on peoples dark side. They say nothing about social justice. Nothing about the nuclear arms race. Nothing about our militarism or materialism.
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http://www.salon.com/2014/05/25/jimmy_carters_evangelical_downfall_reagan_religion_and_the_1980_presidential_election/
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