After years of avoiding direct mention of his religion, Mitt Romney
will open up about his Mormon faith as he accepts the Republican nomination for
president.
The former Massachusetts governor is the first Mormon presidential
candidate on a major party ticket. It's unclear just how much detail he will
provide on Thursday night, the pinnacle of the Republican National Convention
in Tampa, Fla. He has spoken broadly in the past about the importance of prayer
and belief in God, but has not discussed the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
"I think this is a speech where he's going to talk a lot about
what's informed his values, what's informed his outlook. Of course his faith is
an important part of that," Romney aide Kevin Madden said in Tampa this week.
"It's an important part of who he is as a husband and a father. And so I
think you can expect some of that."
Starting in the 1980s, Romney was a bishop in the Boston suburb of
Belmont, a job akin to the pastor of a congregation. He then served as a stake
president, the top Mormon authority in his region, which meant he presided over
several congregations in a district similar to a diocese.
He counseled Latter-day Saints on their most personal concerns,
regarding marriage, parenting, finances and faith. He worked with immigrant
converts from Haiti, Cambodia and other countries.
Grant Bennett, an assistant to Romney at the Belmont congregation,
has in the past described how Romney built relationships with other religious
groups around his Belmont, Mass., hometown, after a suspicious fire in 1984
destroyed a new Mormon meeting house there.
Bennett told delegates Thursday that Romney had "a listening
ear and a helping hand." He said Romney devoted as many as 20 hours a week
at his own expense.
Ted and Pat Oparowski, also fellow Mormons, recalled how Romney
helped their dying son write his will. And Pam Finlayson, who belonged to
Romney's congregation, remembered him stroking the back of her prematurely born
daughter during a hospital visit and bringing over Thanksgiving dinner.
Only Bennett used the full name of the church when speaking about
Romney's years of service.
Other convention speakers had already laid a foundation for this new
faith emphasis. In his acceptance speech Wednesday night, vice presidential
nominee Paul Ryan, a Roman Catholic, said "our different faiths come
together in the same moral creed."
Ann Romney, in a speech meant to show a more personal side of her
husband, described the early challenges they faced as a couple, including
religious differences. "I was Episcopalian. He was a Mormon," she
said. The reference was striking given that the Romneys almost never use the
word Mormon on the campaign trail.
Republican evangelicals have been playing down conflict with
Latter-day Saints. Most prominently, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee,
speaking from the podium Wednesday night, said, "I care far less as to
where Mitt Romney takes his family to church, than I do about where he takes
this country."
Huckabee, a Southern Baptist pastor before he entered politics, had
publicly questioned Mormon beliefs when he was competing against Romney in the
2008 presidential primary. Most Christians don't consider Latter-day Saints
part of traditional Christianity, although Mormons do.
Romney has struggled to navigate as a member of a religious minority
seeking the nation's highest office.
Since Mormons generally live in concentrated communities in the
Mountain West and California, few Americans have met a Latter-day Saint. Most
Mormons said they were stunned by the open expression of prejudice against
their church during Romney's first bid for the White House.
In his 2008 campaign, Romney openly courted evangelicals, who make
up about a quarter of the electorate and are a critical part of the Republican
base. He stressed the beliefs he shared with Christian conservatives about
Christ and the Bible, and he promised he would not be influenced on policy by
the leaders of the LDS church. This year, he has done little public outreach
with Protestant conservatives and, until now, has largely separated his
Mormonism from his campaign.
"He's trying to find the right register, and those around him
who advise him are trying to find the right register. Now, it seems, the push
is to make him look human, that means emphasizing the admittedly wonderful
things he has done in the church to help people," said Laurie Maffly-Kipp,
a religion scholar at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who writes
frequently about the LDS church. "The trick is to do that without bringing
up the parts of Mormonism that might sound odd to others."
A Gallup poll in June found that voter bias against Mormons has
barely budged for decades. In the survey, 18 percent of Americans said they
would not vote for a well-qualified presidential candidate who happens to be a
Mormon, compared to 17 percent who said so in 1967, when Romney's father George
had been seeking the Republican nomination.
However, the campaign clearly felt more confident discussing the LDS
Church since Romney sealed the nomination.
Polls indicate that Republican voters are willing to set aside their
concerns about the LDS church to oust President Barack Obama. A recent poll by
the Pew Research Center found that a majority of people who know that Romney is
Mormon are comfortable with his religion or don't consider it a concern. In the
days leading up to the convention, Romney told interviewers he prays daily and
discussed the doubts he experienced about his religion when he, like most young
Mormon men, fulfilled his church duty to serve as a missionary. Romney served
in overwhelmingly Catholic France during the 1960s, and faced hostility as an
American and a Mormon.
"I don't think underlying attitudes have changed," said
John Green, director of the University of Akron's Bliss Institute for Applied
Politics. "I don't think evangelicals are any less skeptical about
Mormons, but an election is a choice and Republicans have something to work
with here because of the unpopularity of Obama among this group of
evangelicals."
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