Concern in G.O.P. Over State Focus on Social Issues

Seth Perlman/Associated Press
Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin signed a law allowing schools to teach
abstinence rather than contraception.

By MICHAEL COOPER

Fiscal issues and union rights were front and center in many
Republican-controlled legislatures last year. But this year, with the
nation heading into the heart of a presidential race and voters
consumed by the country’s economic woes, much of the debate in
statehouses has centered on social issues.

Tennessee enacted a law this month intended to protect teachers who
question the theory of evolution. Arizona moved to ban nearly all
abortions after 20 weeks, and Mississippi imposed regulations that
could close the state’s only abortion clinic. Gov. Scott Walker of
Wisconsin signed a law allowing the state’s public schools to teach
about abstinence instead of contraception.

The recent flurry of socially conservative legislation, on issues
ranging from expanding gun rights to placing new restrictions on
abortion, comes as Republicans at the national level are eager to
refocus attention on economic issues.

Some Republican strategists and officials, reluctant to be identified
because they do not want to publicly antagonize the party’s base, fear
that the attention these divisive social issues are receiving at the
state level could harm the party’s chances in November, when its hopes
of winning back the White House will most likely rest with independent
voters in a handful of swing states.

One seasoned strategist called the problem potentially huge. But
others said that actions taken by a handful of states would probably
have little impact on the national campaign.

Gov. Mitch Daniels of Indiana, a Republican who created a stir a
couple of years ago with his suggestion for a “truce” on social
issues, said in an interview that such issues are best handled at the
state and local levels. They become more polarizing, he said, when
people try to settle them nationally.

“If we don’t address soon what I believe are the lethal threats of our
debts, our unaffordable commitments, our slow-growth economy, and so
forth, every other problem will seem small,” said Mr. Daniels, whose
state did see union protests this year when it enacted a so-called
right-to-work law. He noted that Mitt Romney’s campaign was already
emphasizing the economy at every opportunity.

“The genuine risk to our party comes if we allow it to appear that
these are our first preoccupations,” he said.

But John Weaver, a Republican strategist who worked on the
presidential campaigns of Senator John McCain and Jon M. Huntsman Jr.,
said that the attention Republicans were paying to social issues at
the state level could cost the party support from several important
blocs of voters, including independents, women and young people voting
for the first or second time.

“I think it’s problematic,” he said, “not just for this national
election we’re facing, but for the long-term health of the party.”

The risks of focusing on social issues were highlighted this week when
the American Legislative Exchange Council, a business-backed group
that pushes conservative laws at the state level, announced that it
would be refocusing its efforts on economic issues. Several sponsors
had recently withheld their support after the group came under public
pressure for advocating voting restrictions and self-defense
legislation modeled on Florida’s Stand Your Ground law, which became
an issue after the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.

It is not only Republican-led states that have turned to social issues
as some of the immediate pressures of the fiscal crisis have begun to
ease: Washington and Maryland, which are controlled by Democrats, both
enacted laws legalizing same-sex marriage this year, and Connecticut
voted this month to repeal its death penalty.

But Republicans have more states: recent election victories have left
them in control of both the executive and legislative branches of 21,
while Democrats control both branches in only 11, and power is divided
in the others.

Many Republican governors are focusing on fiscal issues as well: in
states including Kansas, Oklahoma and Tennessee, Republican governors
have been pressing for tax cuts. But debates over social issues have
drawn much of the attention in some states.

After Tennessee’s Republican-led Legislature passed a bill to protect
school teachers who review “the scientific strengths and weaknesses of
existing scientific theories” in areas including “biological
evolution, the chemical origins of life, global warming and human
cloning,” it drew denunciations from a number of scientists and civil
libertarians. Gov. Bill Haslam, a Republican, decided this month to
let the bill become law without his signature.

Mr. Haslam said in an interview that the law had passed by a wide
margin, so the Legislature could have easily overridden a veto. And he
said that while he feared that the law would muddy state policy for
teachers rather than clarify it, he had been assured by state
education officials that it would not actually change the way science
is taught in Tennessee.

But he said he also worried that the law could damage the reputation
of a state that was home to another famous legal battle over the
teaching of evolution, the Scopes “monkey trial” of 1925.

“One of the things as governor, you’re always out — I’m out selling
Tennessee all the time to businesses and other folks,” Mr. Haslam said
during a recent visit to New York, adding that the state had heavily
focused on the teaching of science, technology, engineering and
mathematics in recent years. “So you worry about misperceptions, sure.
I wouldn’t be honest if I said I didn’t do that. But if I thought it
was actually going to harm the scientific standards, I would have
vetoed it.”

Related
Romney Set to Merge Staff With National Committee (April 21, 2012)
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When Gov. Bob McDonnell of Virginia, the chairman of the Republican
Governors Association, appeared on the MSNBC program “Morning Joe”
last week to talk about his state’s successful efforts to lower its
unemployment rate, he found himself facing a number of questions about
something else: the law he signed requiring women to undergo an
ultrasound before getting an abortion, which received a great deal of
attention this year.

“We had 860 bills this session; one of them reached my desk on
abortion,” Mr. McDonnell said. “So to say that it was some broader
trend is not the case.”

So far this year, 75 bills placing restrictions on abortion have
passed at least one legislative chamber, which is more than normally
pass in an election year, according to a tally by the Guttmacher
Institute, a research organization. But it is below the pace
established last year, when Republicans first won control of many
statehouses and a record 127 restrictions were passed by at least one
house of the legislatures during the first quarter.

Bills expanding gun rights have passed in a number of states. Maine
recently joined several others that passed a bill prohibiting
restrictions on the right to carry or sell firearms during a declared
state of emergency. Arizona enacted a law requiring law enforcement
agencies to sell forfeited guns within a year, rather than destroying
them, as many local agencies do. Oklahoma enacted a law that will
limit the liability that gun ranges face for accidents.

Now, as legislative sessions continue in many states, social issues
continue to be debated and, sometimes, passed. On Tuesday, a Tennessee
legislative committee advanced a measure that some have dubbed the
“don’t say gay” bill because it “prohibits the teaching of or
furnishing of materials on human sexuality other than heterosexuality”
in elementary school.

Speaking before that move, Governor Haslam of Tennessee noted that
people elected to office have varying priorities.

“I think as governor, I was elected to run this, you know, $30
billion, 40,000-employee entity called the State of Tennessee that
provides services from managing prisons to educating Ph.D.’s to
helping families with mental health issues, and my job is getting the
very best service for the very lowest price,” he said. “People run for
office for different reasons. And we have some members of our
Legislature that that’s the motivating factor, certain social issues.
My response is, that’s how democracy works.”

More:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/21/us/politics/republicans-concerned-over-state-focus-on-social-issues.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1

-- 
Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
Have a great day,
Tommy



-- 
Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
Have a great day,
Tommy

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