Archive   |   Biography   |   RSS Feed   |   Discussion   |   Podcast   |   Opinions Home

In Iowa, They Like Mike

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
By Ruth Marcus
Wednesday, December 5, 2007

WAUKEE, Iowa -- Lori Hommer is threading blue ribbon through contribution envelopes to hang on the Christmas trees at Point of Grace Church, and she scarcely pauses when asked if she's decided on a candidate in next month's caucuses.

"Yes, Mike Huckabee," said Hommer, 50, who teaches at the church. "He has conservative Christian values . . . the same values I have." As to the man who had been leading in the polls here until recently, she said, "I could probably support Mitt Romney if I had to. I'm just a little leery of him. I'm just not sure he's genuine."

Hommer was both typical and atypical of the people I spoke with during Sunday-morning visits to three evangelical churches outside Des Moines.

She was atypical in that she was even thinking about caucusing. Most people -- noshing on bagels before the early service at Point of Grace, dropping off toddlers at day care at Valley Evangelical Free Church, sipping coffee after services at Crossroads Fellowship Christian Reformed -- practically recoiled when asked about caucuses.

It wasn't a question of the event conflicting with the Orange Bowl or coming so soon after the holidays or of dissatisfaction with the field -- though those may also depress turnout. They had made it to church on an icy December morning, but politics didn't interest them enough for them to consider venturing out on a frigid January night.

Hommer was typical in that, among likely caucusgoers at the churches I visited, support for Huckabee was overwhelming. I encountered more Hillary Clinton voters (one) than Romney backers.

"Romney seems like a politician to me -- a little bit like Hillary Clinton -- they're going to say what they need to say to get elected," said Nate Schelhaas, 33, an Urbandale actuary who attends Crossroads, where Huckabee preached this summer.

"At first I was more interested in Mitt Romney," said Jeff Williams, 41, pastor at Point of Grace. "I'm just too nervous about his past changes on issues. If the right situation comes along, will he change policies again?"

Huckabee is getting help delivering that message from some surprising bedfellows: A new ad by the Republican Majority for Choice details Romney's shifting positions on abortion -- and urges him to flip back, but it may have the effect of driving more voters to the staunchly antiabortion Huckabee.

For now, Williams is wavering between Huckabee and former Tennessee senator Fred Thompson, but Huckabee's recent surge has swayed him. "As he became stronger, I was more interested."

With evangelicals expected to comprise four in 10 Republican caucusgoers, voters such as Williams hold the key to a Huckabee victory -- and they could deliver it. In the latest Post-ABC News poll of likely GOP caucusgoers, the former Arkansas governor led Romney 44 percent to 22 percent among evangelical Protestants.

It is no coincidence that Huckabee's new TV ad opens with a shot of the Southern Baptist minister and the words "Christian Leader." A little unsettling -- imagine an ad touting Joe Lieberman as a "Jewish leader" -- and perhaps a subtle effort to reinforce evangelical voters' squeamishness about Romney's Mormonism, but no doubt effective: Huckabee's "Christian values" was the most commented-on selling point I heard here.


CONTINUED     1        >


More Washington Post Opinions

PostPartisan

Post Partisan

Quick takes from The Post's opinion writers.

Washington Sketch

Washington Sketch

Dana Milbank writes about political theater in the capital.

Tom Toles

Tom Toles

See his latest editorial cartoon.

© 2007 The Washington Post Company