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Values voters see common cause, if not agenda, with tea party

WASHINGTON (RNS) With its emphasis on lower taxes and smaller
government, the "tea party" movement hasn't spent a lot of time on the
social issues that animate social conservatives -- abortion, gay
marriage or stem cell research.

But that doesn't worry Leigh-Ann Bellew, the New Jersey leader of a
conservative mother's group, who sees "faith-based" activists among the
tea party foot soldiers heading into the fall mid-term elections.

"What I've seen in the tea party (events) that I've been to is it's
a highly pro-life, traditional values group -- not all of them, but many
of them," said Bellew, vice president of MOM for America.

"I wish they'd be more vocal about it but I think they're afraid
that might divide up the movement."

Texas lawyer Matt Krause, too, may not agree with tea party icon
Glenn Beck's Mormonism, but says he saw a kindred spirit in the
broadcaster's recent God-and-country rally along the National Mall.

Many of the estimated 2,000 social conservatives who flocked here
Friday (Sept. 17) for the annual Values Voter Summit say the tea party's
smaller-is-better conservatism resonates with them, even if it doesn't
always hit all the same hot buttons.

"We're not just one issue only," said Dale Burroughs, a pastoral
counselor from Bradenton, Fla. "We have a social agenda but we also
recognize economic problems, too. It's like a train track. You have two
rails and they're going in the same direction. They're just two separate
tracks."

Mike Farris, chairman of the Home School Legal Defense Association,
said coalition building -- with the tea party or any other ally -- is
key for evangelicals and other politically minded social conservatives.

"The historic problem that I have ... with social issues not getting
the proper attention is not with grass-roots groups like the tea party,"
said Farris. "It's with Republican elected officials who rely heavily on
social conservative efforts to get them elected, then they ignore those
issues once they get into office."

Family Research Council president Tony Perkins, who has built the
annual Values Voter rally into a must-attend event for leading GOP
figures, is among those concerned that the energy of the tea party is
overshadowing the social issues that energize this crowd.

"We can have great economic power, abundant goods and services, a
thriving financial system, the finest and best equipped and most
technologically advanced military in the world, but they cannot last
without strong families and a culture that upholds the sanctity of life
and the centrality of religious liberty," he said in a recent speech.

Beck, who has said that gay marriage and abortion aren't his focus
because "we have bigger fish to fry," nevertheless gets significant
support from evangelicals.

A new poll conducted by Public Religion Research Institute and
Religion News Service found 49 percent of evangelicals have a favorable
opinion of Beck (compared to 28 percent of all Americans), although
those views dampen among evangelicals who disagree with Mormon theology.

While some religious conservatives are warming to the tea party
movement, the Rev. Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United
for Separation of Church and State, sees it as little more than
political expediency.

"Religious right leaders are frustrated that their issues have been
placed on the back burner, and they're hoping to get back in the game by
joining forces with the tea party," said Lynn. "We'll see if that
marriage of convenience takes place."

Even though polls indicate the stagnant economy tops voters'
priorities heading into November, the fiery base of social conservatives
gathered here say they have other issues on their minds, and their
agendas.

"I think the economy is important," said Alan LaRue, a pastor of a
nondenominational church in Angola, Ind., "but if the other values go
down, what do we have?"

Adelle M. Banks

Adelle M. Banks is a national reporter for Religion News Service.

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