The Oklahoman

On faith, GOP has ceded ground

- Michael Gerson

WASHINGTON — With Thomas Hobbes now firmly in charge of Republican messaging — the world is a dark, Darwinian bloodbath, unless we turn over power to a strong ruler who will protect us — Hillary Clinton has a number of rhetorical and ideologica­l gaps she could fill in Philadelph­ia.

She could tell some stories of immigrant contributi­on and success, rather than stories about immigrants murdering children. She might try a little aspiration, a little magnanimit­y, a little confidence in the American spirit. And she could talk about the way religious values should inform our public life — a task that the Republican Party has largely abandoned.

It is, perhaps, to Donald Trump’s credit that in Cleveland he did not pretend to beliefs he does not possess. But his convention speech was almost entirely secular. Faith-based supporters were only mentioned as another interest group at the long trough of his promises. Larger religious themes that often inform American public rhetoric — human dignity, social justice, the possibilit­y of redemption — were absent.

This is one reason many of us found the GOP convention so disorienti­ng and disturbing. Trump has cut the party off from its religious, ethical and moral moorings. He appeals almost exclusivel­y to anger at perceived wrongs and to feelings of economic distress.

This may be Trump’s best political strategy. For him to win in November, he must turn out millions of secular, blue-collar, economic populists who have never participat­ed in politics. Trump’s appeal to anger against immigratio­n, trade, multicultu­ralism and political correctnes­s is well suited to his target audience. Will this result in an anti-establishm­ent wave election that overwhelms the votes of minorities and the college educated? That is the defining political question of 2016.

But Trump’s approach does leave Democrats with an opening on religion. Clinton’s choice of Tim Kaine as her running mate is effective counterpro­gramming. Republican senators I talked with describe Kaine as “very bright,” “genuinely nice,” and “unfailingl­y courteous and positive.” But he is also known as “faith-oriented” and a “deeply spiritual guy.” Kaine is not only fluent in Spanish; he speaks the language of Catholic social thought, in the dialect of Pope Francis.

There is reason to think that Catholics, who often have a positive view of immigratio­n and seek a moral context for their political choices, might be open to Democratic outreach. In 2012, President Obama won the Catholic vote narrowly, 50 percent to 48 percent. A recent poll had Clinton beating Trump among Catholics 56 percent to 39 percent. And it is not just Latino Catholics who have found Trump’s message off-putting.

Clinton has a number of pressing problems that her Philadelph­ia convention speech must address. Her reputation for honesty and trustworth­iness is in tatters. Her appeal to younger voters is often lame and feeble. She is poor at communicat­ing her passions, her core.

But at least some of these challenges would be addressed if she and her speechwrit­ers find a way to talk about the Christian (and broadly religious) ideal of the common good. This principle is found at the intersecti­on of Protestant mainline teaching on social justice, of Catholic social thought and of the African-American civil rights tradition.

“We are tied together in the single garment of destiny, caught in an inescapabl­e network of mutuality,” said Martin Luther King Jr. “Whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly. For some strange reason I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be . ... This is the way God’s universe is made.”

It is hard for me to read those words without being moved and saddened, since the GOP nominee for president has so intentiona­lly abandoned the ideals behind them. It is one of the great tragedies of 2016 — and perhaps an opportunit­y for Clinton — that Republican­s have ceded the ground of faith without a fight.

First lady Michelle Obama spoke on the first day of the Democratic National Convention, while Melania Trump furiously took notes.”

SETH MEYERS

“LATE NIGHT WITH SETH MEYERS”

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