Dobson lambastes GOP for abandoning ‘values voters’

Here’s a helpful bookend for my last post. The few remaining GOP moderates believe Republicans lost because they’re too conservative, while religious right leaders like James Dobson insist the party isn’t conservative enough.

Conservative Christian leader James Dobson accused the Republican Party of abandoning values voters in the midterm elections — and paying the price by losing control of Congress. “What did they do with their power?” Dobson said in a statement. “Very little that values voters care about.” […]

Dobson, chairman of Focus on the Family, issued a statement railing against the Republicans for letting their majorities slip away.

“They consistently ignored the constituency that put them in power until it was late in the game, and then frantically tried to catch up at the last minute,” said Dobson, who argued that religious conservatives ensured GOP wins in 2004.

Dobson added that Republican candidates are headed for a “black hole…if they continue to abandon their pro-moral, pro-family and pro-life base. The big tent will turn into a three-ring circus.”

Indeed, as Dobson sees it, this week’s results prove his point. Republicans didn’t follow through on a religious-right agenda, the movement became disillusioned, and the GOP lost Congress. “Many of the values voters of ’04 simply stayed at home this year,” Dobson said.

It’s a relatively compelling argument, except for one thing: he’s wrong.

The New York Times’ Laurie Goodstein noted the voting trends as they were, not as Dobson wanted them to be. Indeed, as a percentage of the voting electorate, religious right voting went up, not down.

Defying predictions of widespread disillusionment, white evangelical and born-again Christians did not desert Republican Congressional candidates and they did not stay home, nationwide exit polls show.

When it came to turnout, white evangelicals and born-again Christians made up about 24 percent of those who voted, compared with 23 percent in the 2004 election. And 70 percent of those white evangelical and born-again Christians voted for Republican Congressional candidates nationally, also little changed from the 72 percent who voted for such candidates in 2004.

“It looks like the white evangelical base of the Republican Party pretty much held firm,” said John Green, a senior fellow with the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, said. “The white evangelicals did show up, and they did vote Republican.”

So, Dobson is not only wrong, he’s making hollow threats. He’ll no doubt keep pushing GOP leaders, insisting that the party lost Congress because they lost “values voters,” but the actual results are, perhaps, the most dangerous scenario of all for Dobson & Co. — the religious right rank-and-file reminded Republicans that the Christian conservative base will back the party on Election Day, whether the party does anything for them or not. Dobson’s threats are full of bluster, but they’re hollow.

Better luck next time, Jimbo.

A lot of Republican voters voted, they just didn’t all vote Republican.

God bless the sheeple, still pushing that lever for the pellet that never comes.

  • “Dobson added that Republican candidates are headed for a “black hole…if they continue to abandon their pro-moral, pro-family and pro-life base. The big tent will turn into a three-ring circus.””

    I think Dobson has been smoking crank with Haggard in some upscale hotel room. Sorry, kiddie smacker. The Repubs have moved beyond the circus. It’s evolved(ha) into a backwoods freak show.

  • The big tent will turn into a three-ring circus

    With Dobson and his ilk starring as big piles of elephant crap and Katherine Harris as the girl in sparkly tights.

    I’m surprised he just didn’t come out and say the GOP’s losses were God’s punishment and if I didn’t know better I’d say that someone is more concerned about losing his political clout and access to the heady heights of power in DC than the soul of the nation. But why doesn’t he stop crying and form his own political party? Yeah, The National Saved by God Wanker’s Party. That would make good TV. And when some one snuck in to one of their rallies and put LSD in the Kool-Aid it would make excellent TV.

    Oh well. I find myself hoping he’ll convince a few Republicons to stay on the path o’ hate resulting in a few more wing nuts being sucked into the black hole of political obscurity.

  • When as the threat to not come out and vote ever gotten any group anything they wanted.

    Now, the AARP does it right. They get more than their share of the population out to vote, as does the NRA, and politicans sit up and notice.

    But whinning and threatening to stay home, that does you no good at all.

    So keep it up James.

  • Ooh, I do love a big fat Republican eating his own leg. Now all we need is some quotes where Dobson trashes David Kuo for saying the Republicans are just using their Christian base…

    Oh, there it is:
    http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com/archives/8749.html

    Sadly, Kuo’s characterization of his former colleagues, bosses and mission — mischaracterizations, really — will be fed to the public as truth.”

    But back to the article about the Dobson saying what Kuo said…

    “…More than four in 10 evangelicals said corruption and scandals were extremely important… About a third who were most concerned about corruption cast their votes for Democrats…”

    So 2/3 of the evangelicals “concerned about corruption” voted for the most corrupt party since Tammany Hall???

    Bag. Of. Hammers.

    I hope Dobson realizes that he needs to SAVE AMERICA. He needs to show the Republicans how it’s done and run for president himself. If HE was president, nobody would ignore the Christians.

    Jesus will back you up, James! He loves you!

    Go for it, and forget helping the Republicans any more!

  • Let’s not get ahead of ourselves and disabuse Dobson of this notion that evangelical voters stayed away from the polls. Maybe he’ll be mad enough to break away from the GOP and form a true “Christian” third party. This can be a good thing.

    So with that in mind … we should be saying:

    “You’re right, Dr. Dobson. The GOP is takes evangelical Christians for a bunch of morons. The question is are you going to take it again, or be a man and do something about it?”

  • Dobson keeps trying to bargain with God, but his deal is really with Mephistopheles.

    Why do so many values-voters shop at Wal-mart. Must be the values.

    Hmmm 10+2? That’s easy. there are 12 disicples. ;-), I get your coded messages to us evangelicals, CB

  • Dobson just needs to remember that everything happens according to God’s plan, which means it was God’s plan to bring about a Democratic majority.

    Amen.

  • I was unaware that only one group of voters had values. I thought everyone had values. Sorry, Peggy, I’m being graceless again.

  • Xenophobic wankers like Jimmy “Doh!” Dobson are quite skilled at the fine art of “predicitng” bad things—after they happen. But now, it is my turn.

    Dear Xenophobic Wanker-Type Person:
    I have absolutely no need whatsoever for your Xenophobic Wankerisms. If I want to read a drivellously-vague and destined-to-fail prediction, I will read my horoscope.

    Oh, and by the way, you will fail in your mission to establish your Great Big Brutish American Taliban-Lite Theocracy.

    Sincerely,
    Mr. and Mrs. America—and All the Ships at Sea….

  • Dobson wants what? Year after year of lose-lose politics, dysfuntional policy, and the world according to Bill Frist?

  • This is kind of an apple to organges comparison. It would be better to compare the percentage of RR that voted in 2002 to 2006 since both are mid-term elections.

    It would be better to compare the absolute number of RR that voted in 2004 to 2006. Just because the number ticked up 1 percentage point from 2004 to 2006, it could still be an overall decline in the actual number that voted.

  • I keep waiting for Dobson’s fellow traveler, Pat Robertson to predict that tornadoes are going to strike South Dakota because they voted down the abortion ban. I think that vote has gotten far less notice than it deserves.

  • … white evangelicals and born-again Christians made up about 24 percent of those who voted …

    I’m not that good at math, but I’m fairly confident that 24 percent does not a majority make. So if Dobson wants the GOP to only get votes from a quarter of the voting public by pandering to them through ricockulous legislation and issues, fine by me.

    I think the rest of us will be more than happy to address the needs of the remaining 76 percent.

  • “It’s a relatively compelling argument, except for one thing:he’s wrong. he’s batshit crazy! ”

    The reason that the GOP did not sieze on their total majority to implement the whim of the moral majority is that in America the positions taken by theses goofballs are mostly unconsititutional. The one that are not are so far out of the mainstream that they might as well be advocating for a Consititutional ammendment forcing all goldfish to wear shoes.

  • I think Dobson and his ilk had better clean up their own nests.

    As foul as the Republicans are, the evangalists have their own hypocricy which maybe the voters are finally noticing.

  • Dobson is obviously smoking something if he seriously thinks that a total capitulation to him means the Republicans would have kept control of the House and/or Senate.

  • Dobson is obviously smoking something

    Yep, and he found it in sHaggard’s garbage. I’ve been wondering if the Religious Right will calm down after a while and go away or if they’ll get worse (louder, more violent). I’m banking on worse.

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