2020 Democrats Talk Faith, Conservative Christian Leaders Respond
As Democratic presidential hopefuls work to position themselves as the candidate to unify the country and win over supporters of President Trump, an influential Iowa evangelical leader is inviting them to a forum on religion and politics traditionally reserved for Republicans ahead of Iowa's first-in-the-nation caucuses.
Bob Vander Plaats, president of The Family Leader, said he's sending invitations Friday to the top seven Democratic primary candidates in current polls.
"A lot of them are using faith as kind of a focal point, as a centerpiece," Vander Plaats said. "So we'd like to find out what makes them tick."
The invitees to the Family Leadership Summit, scheduled for July 12 near Des Moines, include California Sen. Kamala Harris; South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg; Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren; former Vice President Joe Biden; Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders; former Texas Rep. Beto O'Rourke and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker. NPR reached out for comment to all seven campaigns, but most declined to respond on the record.
A spokesman for Buttigieg, who was criticized by a prominent conservative Christian leader this week for being gay, said he would consider attending.
In a statement to NPR, a spokesman for O'Rourke said the former congressman would not accept the invitation. "Vander Plaats and the Family Leader have unapologetically provided a forum for dangerous anti-LGBTQ hate speech on numerous occasions," Chris Evans said. "They are the antithesis of the unifying, inclusive, welcoming atmosphere that our campaign prides itself on in Iowa and across the country. We will not be participating in this forum."
The event has loomed large in past Republican caucus campaigns, drawing about 3,000 voters in 2015 – the year then-candidate Donald Trump famously criticized the late Republican Sen. John McCain's military service at the event.
It's the first time The Family Leader has invited candidates actively seeking the Democratic presidential nomination to the event, a spokesman said. Vander Plaats acknowledged that the group – known for fighting same-sex marriage – is "an unlikely venue" for Democrats, but added, "If you're going to cast a vision of unity, I think you need to be able to have the courage then to go to that venue... and cast that vision."
Vander Plaats noted that in recent weeks, several candidates have woven their personal faith into their pitches to voters. Warren has made the case that her Christian faith helped shape her liberal political values. Harris opened her campaign by calling for "unity" and speaking of her "faith in God" during her announcement speech in January.
Buttigieg has spoken openly about his Episcopalian faith, his sexuality and his marriage to his husband Chasten – and has sparred with conservatives including Vice President Mike Pence.
This week, Franklin Graham, son of the late Rev. Billy Graham, questioned Buttigieg's claim to Christianity in a series of tweets, saying in part, "As a Christian I believe the Bible which defines homosexuality as sin, something to be repentant of, not something to be flaunted, praised or politicized."
"I agree with what Franklin tweeted; my guess is the base that is gonna show up at the Family Leadership Summit is gonna agree with what Franklin tweeted," Vander Plaats said. "But why run from that conversation?"
Large majorities of Christians in the U.S. support same-sex marriage, though a majority of white evangelicals oppose, according to a 2018 survey by PRRI.
Vander Plaats is a controversial figure, who's been regarded as a kingmaker among white evangelicals in Iowa, where the conservative Christian vote is a vital voting bloc for Republicans. During the 2012 presidential election cycle, Vander Plaats sparked criticism – including from within the Republican Party – for asking candidates for the GOP nomination to sign a "marriage vow" promising fidelity to one's spouse, "rejection of Sharia Islam," and support for "robust childbearing and reproduction," among other things.
After widespread condemnation, The Family Leader issued an apology and removed language initially included in the document stating that slavery "had a disastrous impact on African-American families, yet sadly a child born into slavery in 1860 was more likely to be raised by his mother and father in a two-parent household than was an African-American baby born after the election of the USA's first African-American President."
VanderPlaats also has been, at times, a critic of President Trump's character and rhetoric – though he's largely supported Trump's policies on issues like restricting abortion.
Daniel Hoffman-Zinnel, executive director of One Iowa, an LGBTQ rights group, expressed mixed feelings about the invitation to Democratic candidates.
"I would be a little surprised if any of them really took him up on this offer to engage in this conversation," Hoffman-Zinnel said.
But he added that if a candidate like Buttigieg were to accept, it could open a door to important conversations.
"It potentially could show the audience of The Family Leader a visible, positive representation of an out gay man who's running for the highest office in our land," he said. "So maybe it could potentially change people's hearts and minds – or at least get them to think more broadly."
Hoffman-Zinnel added that if candidates accept the offer, Vander Plaats has "a responsibility to create a very safe environment where folks feel comfortable being there."
During a recent visit to Iowa, Hoffman-Zinnel noted, Buttigieg was met with anti-gay hecklers. At one stop, a protester dressed as Buttigieg pretended to whip a man dressed as Jesus Christ while he carried a wooden cross, while another protester dressed as the devil looked on.
After those protests, The Family Leader said in a tweet that, "Shouting protests, namecalling are NOT how Christians are called to engage with our culture."
Vander Plaats said it "would not be our intent" for candidates to face a hostile audience, and that he hopes to "model civil conversation, even in areas where we have deep disagreements."
"You get points just for showing up," Vander Plaats said. "And so I think our audience would embrace them."
Jenna Ellis, an evangelical attorney and adviser to President Trump's 2020 campaign, said she'd like to see Democrats engage in a public conversation about faith. But she doesn't think many conservative white evangelicals would be won over.
"Their position is completely hypocritical to what it actually means to be a Christian," she said. "If they're reaching out to evangelicals and saying, 'I am a Christian, but I support gay marriage; I am a Christian, but I support abortion,' that's being hypocritical."
Despite the opposition Democrats may face in such a crowd, Christopher Hale, a faith adviser to President Obama's 2012 campaign, said he hopes they will reach out to religious voters in "surprising places."
Hale noted that more than 80 percent of white evangelicals supported President Trump in 2016 – and evangelicals make up a significant share of voters in many key Midwestern states.
"I don't know a pathway forward for a Democratic candidate to win back the states we lost in 2016 without winning a higher percentage of the evangelical vote," Hale said.
Hale believes the Democratic Party has largely failed to speak the language of religious voters, but said some of the 2020 candidates are making overtures.
"Democratic candidates oftentimes talk about Jefferson, and Madison, and founding ideals – but we need candidates that can talk about Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John," Hale said, referring to the first four books of the Christian New Testament. "A Democrat's not going to win a majority of the evangelical vote, but you can't win 10 or 15 percent and expect to win this election." [Copyright 2019 NPR]