US conservative Christians target 16 Democrats

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Conservative Christians, a  key base for the Republican Party, said yesterday they were  targeting 16 Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Harry  Reid, in the 2010 congressional elections.

Four other Democratic senators and 11 US representatives  were on the list, which was released at a summit in Washington  of conservative “values voters” who are rallying against  President Barack Obama’s agenda.

The mid-term elections will be the first national test for  Obama, who has seen his approval ratings fall in recent months  as he and his ruling Democratic Party attempted to push through  a sweeping overhaul of the healthcare sector.

“We think we have a shot at taking back some seats,” said  Connie Mackey, president of FRC Action, the legislative or  political arm of the Family Research Council, a conservative  Christian lobby group which organized the summit.

Activists within the “Religious Right,” an informal network  of evangelical Protestants, Catholics and Mormons, hope to sway  voters next year through voter education, advertising, campaign  contributions and endorsements of candidates.

The release of the hit list — it also included Senator  Christopher Dodd of Connecticut — was one of the opening shots  in a Republican effort to pare some of the huge gains made by  Democrats in the 2006 and 2008 elections.

Speakers at the two-day summit attacked the Obama agenda,  particularly healthcare reform, regarded as his top domestic  priority.

Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, a Mormon who  lost the Republican presidential nomination in 2008 and is seen  as a leading contender for the party’s nomination in 2012,  stuck to a common theme:

“The right answer for healthcare is not more government,  it’s less government,” he said to an estimated 2,000 activists  from around the country who attended the summit.

Much of the conservative opposition to Obama’s healthcare  drive — it spurred angry protests at town hall meetings last  month — has been driven by conservative Christians who claim  that it will all lead to federal funding for abortion.

Obama and his supporters have denied the charge.

Conservative Christian voters are deeply opposed to  abortion and often cast their votes based on this issue alone.

A poll of registered delegates found that over 40 per cent  of those who responded ranked abortion as the most important  issue when deciding which candidate to support in an election.  There were 13 issues listed in the poll.

Protection of religious liberty was a distant second at 18  per cent.

Former Arkansas Governor and presidential candidate Mike  Huckabee won a straw poll that asked delegates to choose the  Republican they would most like to see take on Obama in 2012.  Huckabee took 28.5 per cent versus 12.4 per cent for the  runner-up, Romney.