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CAMPAIGN 2008 | FLORIDA

Palin seen as asset to win evangelical vote

While Barack Obama is working harder than his Democratic predecessors to court Christian voters, he is facing a groundswell of support for anti-abortion Republican Sarah Palin.

breinhard@MiamiHerald.com

When two prominent evangelical Christians from Florida agreed to speak at the Democratic National Convention, the party proudly pointed to Barack Obama's aggressive outreach to a traditionally Republican voting bloc.

But one, a Christian magazine publisher, decided not to go on stage, and the other, the Rev. Joel Hunter, who gave the benediction after Obama's speech, said Tuesday he is ''laying low'' until after the election.

Meanwhile, several leaders of the religious right in Florida say they are more enthused than ever about Republican John McCain, pointing to his strong performance at a nationally televised forum at a California church and his staunchly anti-abortion running mate, Sarah Palin.

''Any success Obama was having has been halted and reversed by Gov. Palin's addition to the ticket,'' declared Mathew Staver, chairman of the Liberty Counsel, a religious conservative group based in Orlando. ``I'm seeing energy that was not even rivaled in the highest days of President Bush's reelection in 2004 or even during Ronald Reagan's time.''

Obama's camp is not deterred, pointing to 1,677 ''faith captains'' around Florida who are mobilizing voters in their churches and synagogues. In a sign that the campaign is taking pains to reach the African-American slice of the Christian community, two prominent black Democrats, U.S. Reps. John Conyers of Michigan and John Lewis of Georgia, are meeting this week with religious leaders in Florida.

Joshua DuBois, Obama's national director of religious affairs, said the attendance by Hunter and Relevant magazine publisher Cameron Strang at the Democratic convention showed the campaign was making inroads. Hunter, who leads the 12,000-member Northland Church in Longwood, is a Republican who voted twice for President Bush.

''We were never seeking or expecting [their] endorsements, and I think that speaks to the authentic nature of Barack Obama's religious outreach,'' DuBois said. ``It's a very positive movement.''

Strang, who participated in a faith caucus at the convention but decided that speaking on national television would be too political, said Obama has a chance to peel away evangelicals, particularly the younger voters who read his magazine. Obama has effectively emphasized areas of common ground, like social justice and the environment, Strang said. But he warned of a backlash if Democrats hammer Palin's hard-line stance on abortion.

''If they use it as wedge issue, it will push away Christian voters and they will undo everything positive they've accomplished in terms of faith outreach,'' said Strang, who recently changed his voter registration from Republican to independent. ``I think a lot of moderate Christians are still up for grabs.''

Hunter's political allegiance is unclear. Asked about the reaction from his parishioners to his role at the Democratic convention, he said, 'I would say `mixed' and leave it at that.''

The pastor frequently speaks to reporters but declined to talk about Obama's Christian outreach and whether he personally would take sides in the race.

''Anything that somebody like me says will inevitably be used for partisan political purposes,'' he said.

Some Republican strategists feared the evangelical Christians who helped reelect Bush would sit out the 2008 race because of McCain's on-again, off-again relationship with the faith-based community.

McCain tried to allay those concerns at last month's forum at Saddleback Church by speaking forcefully about his opposition to abortion. In contrast, Obama said it was ''above my pay grade'' to know when life begins, a moment one Florida evangelical leader described as a ``tipping point.''

The Christian Coalition of Florida is preparing to distribute three million voter guides that will not offer endorsements but will outline the candidates' divergent positions on abortion, gay rights and school vouchers.

''That stay-at-home thing is over,'' said Dennis Baxley, the group's executive director. ``There has been a marked shift from people saying they will vote for John McCain to people saying that they will work for the ticket.''

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