A parade of potential Republican presidential candidates on Saturday vied for attention at a gathering of social conservatives who will play a key role in next year’s Iowa caucuses that commence the battle for the party’s nomination.
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, Senator Ted Cruz, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker and many others turned the Iowa Freedom Forum into the unofficial launch of the next campaign for the Iowa caucuses. More than 1,000 religious conservatives met at a refurbished theater to hear their pitches.
Missing from the gathering were two possible candidates considered leading contenders for the nomination: former Florida governor Jeb Bush and the party’s 2012 nominee, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney. Also missing from the lineup were senators Rand Paul and Marco Rubio.
Photo: AFP
Cruz cited the Bible as he challenged caucus participants to back only presidential candidates with a proven conservative track record.
“You know what,” he said, “talk is cheap. The word tells us you shall know them by their fruits ... Look every candidate in the eye and say ‘Don’t talk, show me.’”
In his remarks, Walker promoted his administration’s enactment of voter identification, concealed carry handgun and abortion restriction legislation — all issues appealing to the conservative audience. For many Republicans, he is best known for restricting the rights of public employee unions, beating back a recall effort and then winning re-election.
“You see, I think that sends a powerful message to Republicans in Washington and around the country that if you’re not afraid to go big and go bold you can actually get results,” Walker said.
Rick Santorum, the former senator from Pennsylvania who won the 2012 Iowa caucuses, said Republicans need to do a better job convincing working-class Americans that Republicans are on their side.
“We don’t win because too many people don’t think we care about them, Santorum said as he called for lower taxes, less regulation and stronger family values.
The forum’s sponsor, Representative. Steve King, opened the event by asking the crowd: “Do you believe that the next president of the United States is going to be speaking to you today?”
The audience erupted in applause and King responded: “As do I.”
Among others speaking at the forum were businesswoman Carly Fiorina, former vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin and real estate mogul Donald Trump.
Trump let it be known that he did not think much of Romney and Bush.
“You can’t have Romney. He choked,” Trump said. “You can’t have Bush. The last thing we need is another Bush.”
Christie, an abortion rights and gay marriage opponent better known for his union and budget battles, was not expected to emerge as the favorite among Iowa’s evangelical voters. Yet his appearance could allow him to make inroads with a group focused as much on ideological purity as defeating the Democrat nominated to follow President Barack Obama.
“He has gusto that makes him an everyman. That appeals to me,” 29-year-old Steve Friend of Sioux City said of Christie. “But I think he tanked the 2012 election by praising President Obama after [Hurricane] Sandy.”
Christie has defended his praise of Obama for visiting storm-ravaged New Jersey in the weeks before Romney lost, but it is an image that sticks in the craw of Iowa’s most right-wing conservatives.
“I don’t trust him,” said Mary Kay Hauser, another forum attendee. “I think he’s disingenuous. I think he’s part of the old New Jersey party.”
While Christie has opposed abortion rights for 20 years, he said in 2011 that his Roman Catholic faith “does not rule who I am.” He also has said homosexuality is not a sin and that he believes people who are gay are “born with a predisposition.”
Those statements are red flags in a state where the past two caucus winners, Santorum and former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, closely aligned themselves with Iowa’s evangelical pastors.
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