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Fast Money & Foreign Objects
Unhappy With a Moderate Jeb Bush, Conservatives Aim to Unite Behind an Alternative
By TRIP GABRIELMARCH 25, 2015
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Some conservative Republicans are not happy at the prospect of Jeb Bush, whom they deem an establishment candidate, winning the presidential nomination.CreditDavid Goldman/Associated Press
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By TRIP GABRIELMARCH 25, 2015
Photo
Some conservative Republicans are not happy at the prospect of Jeb Bush, whom they deem an establishment candidate, winning the presidential nomination.CreditDavid Goldman/Associated Press
Continue reading the main storyShare This Page
- Jeb Bush, leaders of the nation’s Christian right have mounted an ambitious effort to coalesce their support behind a single social-conservative contender months before the first primary votes are cast.
In secret straw polls and exclusive meetings from Iowa to California, the leaders are weighing the relative appeal and liabilities of potential standard-bearers like Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and the former governors Rick Perry, of Texas, and Mike Huckabee, of Arkansas.
“There’s a shared desire to come behind a candidate,” said Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, a national lobbying group that opposes abortion and equal rights for gays.
“It would be early for a group of leaders to come out for a candidate, but not too early for the conversations to begin,” he said.
The leaders of evangelical and other socially conservative groups say they do not believe that Mr. Bush, the former governor of Florida — whom they already view as the preferred candidate of the Republican Party’s establishment — would fight for the issues they care most about: opposingsame-sex marriage, holding the line on an immigration overhaul and rolling back abortion rights.
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Who Is Running for President (and Who’s Not)?
The efforts to coalesce behind an alternative candidate — in frequent calls, teleconferences and meetings involving a range of organizations, many of them with overlapping memberships — are premised on two articles of conservative faith: Republicans did not win the White House in the past two elections because their nominees were too moderate and failed to excite the party’s base. And a conservative alternative failed to win the nomination each time because grass-roots voters did not unite behind a single champion in the primary fight.
This time, social conservatives vow, will be different. They plan to unify behind an anti-establishment candidate by this summer or early fall, with the expectation that they will be able to overcome the presumed fund-raising advantage of the Republican elite by exerting their own influence through right-wing talk radio and social media, and by mobilizing an army of like-minded small donors.
“Conservatives smell blood in the water,” said Kellyanne Conway, a Republican pollster who has participated in the vetting. “They feel they’ve got the best shot to deny the establishment a place.”
Ms. Conway said the candidates seen as having potential to energize the party’s right wing would be invited to make their case before national groups of social conservatives in the coming weeks and months.
Richard Viguerie, the conservative direct-mail pioneer, said he was involved in the effort to rally behind a candidate so “we won’t go into this season divided six or eight different ways.”
- http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/26/u...000&bicmp=AD&smtyp=aut&bicmlukp=WT.mc_id&_r=0





