Political Hotsheet
By

Phil Hirschkorn /

CBS News/ March 4, 2012, 5:05 PM

Ralph Reed handicaps the Republican presidential race

Ralph Reed, founder and chair of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, pictured in Atlanta, Ga.

/ CBS

ATLANTA (CBS) - Conservative activists Ralph Reed is officially neutral in this year's Republican presidential primary race, but he knows what conservative Christian voters are looking for.

"They've been hungering for an authentic faith-based candidate," Reed said in an interview this week in his Atlanta home. About six in ten expectant voters participating in the Republican presidential primary in Georgia this Tuesday identify as evangelicals, according to Reed.

"Here, I think a lot of conservative evangelicals want to get behind Rick Santorum, but you have a lot of people who feel a sense of loyalty to Newt, because of all that he did to make Georgia a Republican state," Reed said.

When Newt Gingrich was first elected to Congress in 1978, he was the lone Republican in the state's then ten-member delegation. By the time he became Speaker in 1994, and the state's congressional map had undergone redistricting, Georgia sent eight Republicans and three Democrats to the House of Representatives.

Today in Georgia, the governorship, both houses of the state legislature, both U.S. senators, and two-thirds of the congressional delegation are Republican. Reed, 50, having served as Georgia Republican Party Chairman, was instrumental in building that success, despite an unsuccessful run for lieutenant governor in Georgia in 2006.)

"Newt has a Moses-like profile in the Republican Party. He led the Republican Party nationally out of the wilderness from minority status to majority status in the House of Representatives for the first time in 40 years," Reed said. "Not only that, he brought about the first balanced budgets in people's lifetimes, the deepest and broadest tax cuts since the Reagan presidency, the reform of welfare -- moving two million people from dependency to work and independence and dignity. So he's a transformational figure."

Reed founded, and now chairs, the Faith and Freedom Coalition - a kind of blend of the Christian Coalition he used to run in the 1990s and the Tea Party. The FFC, with 40-thousand members in 30 states, plans to mail 30 million non-partisan voters guides this year.

Reed called former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum a "very accomplished legislator" on issues such as banning late-term abortion and providing school choice. "He's been a fighter and someone who wasn't afraid to take on tough issues," Reed said. "If he wants to win the nomination, he needs to broaden the message beyond that without shedding it."

He expects Santorum to grab many votes that went to Mike Huckabee in the 2008 Georgia primary, where Huckabee (34 percent) beat John McCain (32 percent) and Mitt Romney (30 percent).

Reed said Romney's shortcomings with Christian conservatives stem from the former Massachussetts' governor's "much more moderate past" and "moderate pedigree," including his father, George, a two-term Michigan governor and member of President Nixon's cabinet.

"As a candidate in Massachusetts, particularly when he ran [for Senate] against Ted Kennedy in '94, he ran as a pro-choice candidate," Reed noted. He also cited the state health insurance plan Romney signed into law as governor as drag on his presidential candidacy.

"If he keeps making his case, and he keeps winning his share of those voters, then should he become the nominee, then this process will have been good for him," Reed said. "Through the competition and the rough and tumble of being challenged by a Santorum and a Newt, he was able to make his case to those [evangelical] voters. That will be, should Romney be the ultimate nominee, much better for him than had he simply been anointed and not had a fight."

Reed discounted how much Romney's religion -- he is a Mormon, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints -- is a factor alienating Christian conservatives. He said Romney won about half the evangelical vote in his Florida primary win.

"I think there are some voters who will not vote for Mitt Romney in the primary because of those theological differences, but I think it is a very distinct minority," Reed said. "I'm very confident that voters are more than capable of making a distinction between whether to not they share somebody's theology and whether or not they share someone's values and public policy views."

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
23 Comments Add a Comment
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rockychance says:
Liberals are the true HATE mongers. They hate because they cannot stand people who have workded hard and smart while reaping large sums of reward and will not just hand it over to the liberals to support whatever mindless entitlement program they dream up next. Taxes are at the proper rate now and liberals want it all so they can live off it without working and in the process they will watch the country suffer and all the while blame it on religious conservatives just like they have since Johnson created the GREAT SOCIETY meaning the great give away to the lazy people who want housing, food, phones, gas for their cars and of course, help managing their sex lives which seems to be prolific while the working people(no time for such things) pay for all their pleasures! Baloney on this bunch of liberal entitlements.
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MomsHugs says:
CBS & Phil Hirshkorn: This piece is pure pandering & not informative. How much did you pay Ralph Reed for this interview? Did you initiate it or did Ralph? Why have ignored factual information such as the following:

In the Matter of Representative Newt Gingrich
Congressional Record, dated January 21, 1997
Proceedings and Debates of the 105th Congress, First Session
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CREC-1997-01-21/pdf/CREC-1997-01-21-pt1-PgH171-7.pdf#page=1

The House Ethics Committee, half from each Party, had voted 7 to 1 to reprimand and impose a $300,000 penalty to pay the cost of a 2-year investigation. The record contains repeated statements this was severe & unprecedented punishment - because Gingrich not only used tax-exempt organizations for political gain, but lied repeatedly to the Ethics Committee. The House voted 395-28 in favor of this punishment of Speaker Gingrich despite being controlled by Republicans.

I recommend interviewing Bob Livingston & other Representatives familiar with the record of the entire House procedure to fully understand the significance of why Newt Gingrich's character should be carefully considered by GOP voters now... not later!
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Filmguy870 says:
After the incredible performance of Shrub, I can hardly wait for their next candidate.
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pr_boxer says:
One nutcase's opinion of a bunch of nut cases!
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longtree-2009 says:
only religious right wing nuts care what reed has to say. seriously doubt that all registered republicans are religious right wing nuts. the gop candidate must have mass appeal across the nation in order to beat obama who had mass appeal when he defeated mccain/palin, conservative darlings, by a humiliating landslide. obama still has some of that mass appeal while newt and santorum apparently have no such mass appeal.
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bobnjersey says:
["Newt has a Moses-like profile in the Republican Party. He led the Republican Party nationally out of the wilderness from minority status to majority status in the House of Representatives for the first time in 40 years," Reed said.]
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and coincidentally ... congress has been gridlocked since just around that time.

i'm sure there's no connection though.
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jumkey says:
Well to read this you wouldn't know Ralph Reed is a racist bigoted conservative Christian hate monger.

Did you read his resume CBS News? Because I think there must be a Mullah or Ayatollah out there somewhere you can get for further commentary on other pressing issues.
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andrewjsacks says:
All are losers.
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jeannettelj says:
If we were to leave out religion and contraception we just might have a decent political race!!
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flexsf says:
Look in the mirror, you absurd bigot. ""I think there are some voters who will not vote for Mitt Romney in the primary because of those theological differences, but I think it is a very distinct minority,"". The entire group of fire breathing control freaks you're speaking for are single minded, absolutist zealots who have destroyed Christianity. You're among the greatest facilitator of hatred. Don't blame their angst on Romney and stay out of my private life, you intrusive weasel.
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