Posts Tagged David French

Evangelicals For Mitt Gets Massive Coverage From SRLC Event!

Much appreciation to David and Nancy French for their outstanding efforts and sacrifice on behalf of Mitt Romney!  We at The Competent Conservative love you David and Nancy!  Keep up the great work.  You are “laying up treasures” in all the right places.  God bless you and sustain you in your efforts.

As it is a fact that Mitt would not have won this poll without EFM’s help, I am confident he still would have had a good showing.  It is hard to tell the impact that EFM’s efforts had on this poll, but I know that Mitt had to have had a lot of support, organically, in order to win this straw even with EFM’s help, and without even being present!

Here is a run down from David French of the media coverage:

Davind and Nancy French EFM

New York Times:

Mitt Romney may have taken a pass on the Southern Republican Leadership Conference this weekend, but his campaign did not. There were banners hanging in the hallways of the Hilton Hotel – “Evangelicals for Mitt” – that spread his message in the style of the classic Burma Shave signs.

Marriage is a Moral Issue.
Job Creation is a Moral Issue.
Education is a Moral Issue.

Each sign was accompanied by another selling point for Mr. Romney. “You don’t have to choose between someone who saves our moral values and someone with economic expertise,” the sign said. “One guy has it all.”

Washington Post:

In a surprise, Mitt Romney edged out Ron Paul to win the SRLC straw poll by a single vote. Romney took 439 votes (24 percent) to Paul’s 438 votes (also 24 percent), a result that disappointed a Paul-heavy crowd that had stuck around to watch the results. Sarah Palin came in third with 330 votes (18 percent), and Newt Gingrich came in fourth with 321 votes (18 percent); Mike Huckabee, who did not attend the event, scored 4 percent. Total ballots cast: 1,806.

Romney, who also did not attend the conference, benefited from a grassroots effort from Evangelicals for Mitt, a group run by David and Nancy French — who’d helped Romney score a second-place finish at the 2006 SRLC. They’d purchased around 200 tickets, 800 copies of Romney’s book “No Apology,” and 2000 piggy banks with the Evangelicals for Mitt logo. Before the vote, French soft-peddled the meaning of the exercise, stressing that it was “not binding.” After the vote, French held court near the press boxes as his small team hugged and high-fived.

“Is that not incredible?” French said into a cell phone. “Our guy wasn’t even here!”

When I spoke to French, he stuck by his “not binding” comment, then basked in his victory. “We just wanted to show that Mitt has friends down here.”

Fox News:

The person who didn’t attend the Southern Republican Leadership Conference won the 2012 GOP presidential straw poll. Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney won the straw poll by one vote over Rep. Ron Paul, 438-437.

CBS News:

Mitt Romney won the straw poll at the Southern Republican Leadership conference here Saturday in a victory that will be taken as a sign of the former Massachusetts governor’s strength as a 2012 presidential candidate.

Salon.com (this is actually one of my favorite stories):

Mitt Romney didn’t even show up here this weekend. But he still won the Southern Republican Leadership Conference straw poll — beating Ron Paul, who was here, by one vote, 439-438, and winning 24 percent of the ballots. Only about half the delegates cast a vote. Sarah Palin was in third place, with 18 percent, and Newt Gingrich was just behind her in fourth, also with 18 percent.

. . . .

There was a heavy Romney presence at the conference, though, even if the candidate himself (like Tim Pawlenty) stayed out of town. A group called Evangelicals for Mitt co-sponsored a Friday night party, posted signs all over the Hilton and handed out buttons, Romney books and plastic piggie banks to get the word out for their man. “The thing that’s on everybody’s mind is ‘pocketbook,’” said Nancy French, who lives in Columbia, Tenn. and organized the group with her husband, David, a lawyer for the Christian conservative legal group Alliance Defense Fund. (They left for New Orleans this weekend even though they’re missing Mule Day back home.)

Oh, and I can’t forget the Atlantic story Charles already linked:

Formerly “nominal Republican frontrunner” Mitt Romney can drop nominal from the title. At a gathering headlined by GOP superstars Sarah Palin, Ron Paul, and Newt Gingrich, it was Romney who took the crown jewel of the Southern Republican Leadership Conference, and he didn’t even bother showing up. He took the victory by single vote over Ron Paul, 439 to 438. Paul had a strong presence of vocal activists at the conference, but it was clear from the voting rank-and-file that his stances of nonintervention and opposition to free-trade agreements were not in line with the party as a whole.

Thank you, EFMers. This is your victory.

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David French: A STORY I’VE BEEN MEANING TO TELL

Mitt Romney and Evangelicals

I have to tell my readers how much respect and admiration I have for Davide French, and his Wife Nancy, for the role they are playing in helping Mitt Romney become the 45th President of the United States.  They are doing so by helping their fellow Evangelical Christians learn how to love their Latter Day Saint Christian brothers and sisters.

Many have felt, especially during the past few years, that the bigotry springing forth from the majority of those who call themselves Christians, or disciples of Jesus Christ, have been anything but what they claim to be.  In fact, their behavior and spiritual nature appeared to be closer to that of the Pharisees than it was to Him who was the meekest of us all, The Lord Jesus.  The same cannot be said of David and Nancy French.  I declare that they are true disciples, “in word, in conversation, in faith and in charity.”  God bless you French’s for your strength of character and for being wiling to “take a bullet” in order to do what feel to be the right thing.

I usually don’t post stuff on this blog of a religious nature, but I do feel that David’s post is worthy of re-posting.

Evangelicals for Mitt -David FrenchOne of the great and unexpected blessings of our little Evangelicals for Mitt operation has been seeing how God’s hand has been at work. And when I say that, I don’t mean politics. God holds the nations in the palm of His hand, and as much as we may think (or may think we know) His will in any given political race or political controversy, we don’t. Our perspective is not eternal, our “wisdom” is foolishness compared to God’s, and we humans often have trouble seeing the nose on our face, much less truly understanding the complexities of our own culture. We do our best — because that is our calling — but we completely depend on God to make things right.

When I say that I’ve seen God’s had at work in our efforts here at EFM, I’m actually talking about our relationships with our LDS readers. We stuck our necks out just a tiny bit to declare unequivocally not just our support for Mitt but also our respect for his faith, and the LDS community responded with what is best described as a tidal wave of love in response. This moved me before I left for Iraq, but it turns out that I’d only experienced half the story. The rest — and the mysterious ways of our God — follow.

When I landed in Iraq, I landed in a remote Forward Operating Base near the Iranian border. There we slightly less than 800 of us in our unit, and we were put in the middle of a hornet’s nest. Al Qaeda controlled the countryside, and Thanksgiving morning, 2007, marked the beginning of a nearly year-long battle to drive them out. We lost many good men, including good friends. It was the hardest year of my life.

As you might imagine, there weren’t many LDS Soldiers in our unit. In fact, there were exactly two active LDS members, plus one who describes himself as Mormon-Catholic-Agnostic (he grew up LDS).

How do I know this? Because two of them were my roommates, and one of them was my paralegal. What were the odds? I didn’t choose my roommates, and I didn’t choose my paralegal, but there they were — assigned to me — after I’d spent the better part of the last year working hand in hand with our dear LDS readers, getting to know a dear LDS family (the extended Romney family), and enduring the occasional slings and arrows from those who opposed our efforts. In fact, one of my roommates had even heard of Evangelicals for Mitt and read some of my posts.

It’s strange, but the instant I learned they were LDS, I knew that we would be brothers — and we were. I like to think that maybe when they learned who I was and what I’d been doing with EFM, they knew they had a friend. And I know they loved me and supported me in a way that’s difficult to describe.

God’s ways are mysterious, but they are good. And even if this EFM effort isn’t politically successful, it has blessed my life.

One final note. When I was gone, my wife organized — working thorugh SixSeeds, a Boston-based charity — Operation Send-a-Box which supplied my entire unit (and everywhere else on our base) with a care package that contained clean sheets, towels, reading material, new DVDs, and other “necessities” to help make our remote base a bit more hospitable. When it was all said and done, 2,500 packages arrived. They came from across the country and even from abroad, but where did the largest shipments come from? Tennessee (where I live), Massachusetts (the home of SixSeeds), and . . . Utah.

So before the political wars heat up again, I wanted to pause for a moment and say thank you. Thank you for enriching our lives. And thank God for the blessing of these relationships.

And now, back to regularly scheduled programming.

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Evangelicals For Mitt: A FEW QUESTIONS FOR 2010

I sure wish Evangelicals For Mitt had the option on commenting on their posts.  I say we all send Nancy and David French e-mails requesting they do so because there are a number of posts that seem like they are designed for commenting but no one can do so.  That’s not a true blog!

At any rate, David created a post with a few questions for 2010, which I would like to respond to on his blog, but again, no option to do so.  David has a few prediction of his own and I’d like to see what other’s perspectives are on what David had to say and how things will go for Huckabee, Palin, Romney and Obama.

Here is an excerpt from David French’s post:

(2) How much longer before Mike Huckabee goes after Sarah Palin with both barrels? Right now Huckabee is reeling, but a politician doesn’t go to the pages of the Washington Post to defend his horrific clemency record when he intends to go gently into that good night. I will give one prediction: Mike Huckabee will attempt a political comeback. But Sarah Palin will stand in his way. Her poll numbers are strengthening, she’s an Evangelical Christian, and she has one huge advantage over Huckabee (and no, it’s not her looks): She’s actually conservative.

If there’s one thing we learned about Mike Huckabee, it’s that the (former) pastor has a thin skin and some sharp claws. In time he’ll learn he can’t beat Mitt Romney unless he first beats Sarah Palin. Good luck with that, Governor.

Mitt Romney, Sarah Palin and Mike Huckabee 2012 Obama on the economy

If I could respond to David, I would tell him that I think he is spot on with his prediction of Palin and Huckabee, and the difficulty a Palin run would cause to a Huckabee campaign.  I actually did a post not too long ago titled “Huckabee’s greatest fear for 2012 -Sarah Palin” in which I stated pretty much the same things that David in his article quoted above, and how I think Mitt will benefit from it.

Please, share your prediction and don’t be afraid to speculate.  Speculation is really fun!  So let’s have fun with this.

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David French: Obama’s Irrelevant War Rhetoric

I Love David French’s take on how “war rhetoric” becomes meaningless when it comes down to the heat of the battle.  Obama’s rhetoric is, by my analogy, like a dog gnawing on a steel bone hoping that his sharp strong teeth will tear away at the steel in time, only to find that his teeth have suffered the most and he will, therefore, less likely be able to defend himself from other hostile dogs coming into his territory.

This analogy can also be likened unto the defense buts in our military budget.  Obama can gnaw away with his rhetoric all the day long, alll the while finding that he has only weakened America to the point of not being able to defend herself from “enemies both foreign and domestic.”

Here’s the piece Written by David French author EvangelicalsForMitt, in Townhall:

I used to watch events in Washington closely, fully believing that news reports and political debates had

Autor of EvangelicalsForMitt.com

David French

meaningful impact on the battlefield. I would rage at the mainstream media’s bias, roll my eyes in disgust at Democratic politicians who sometimes seemed to be rooting for failure, and viewed “wobbly” conservatives with contempt.

Then, I joined the U.S. Army Reserves, put on the uniform, and (eventually) rolled out on my first mission “outside the wire” in Diyala Province, Iraq . . . where I couldn’t read Drudge or Politico and had to focus on a single objective — to defeat the enemy that was trying to kill my brothers in arms and kill me. This is when I learned a startling (but now obvious) reality: once the decision is made to fight, political rhetoric matters as much to the outcome of the war as color commentary matters to the outcome of a boxing match.

A few months after my safe return home, I watched Obama’s “apology tour” and listened to the breathless commentary for and against his much-hyped speech in Cairo. Democrats and Republicans alike dissected his rhetoric, parsing its meaning and impact on the “hearts and minds” of everyone from the European intelligentsia to the much-feared “Arab street.” I didn’t care for his speech or his rhetoric. There was just too much moral equivalence, contempt for the good-faith efforts of his predecessors, and catering to the urban punditocracy on both sides of the Atlantic.

Despite the rhetoric, however, he hasn’t changed the facts on the ground. Our troops in Iraq are at force levels determined by the Bush administration and we’re reinforcing Afghanistan just as the much-maligned former President (and John McCain) had planned. Our allies don’t help the new president any more than they helped the old one and Islamic terrorists still burn with the same mindless rage and hate. So how should we process a President who apologizes for past excesses even as Predators strike villages in Pakistan and Marines launch new offensives? Perhaps by realizing that – when it comes to the war – his words don’t mean much.

Al Qaeda doesn’t care about Obama’s Cairo speech. They feel the same way about Americans regardless of whether one president is hosting a Palestinian terrorist at the White House more often than any other foreign leader, the next president has a Texas swagger and says “bring it on,” or the president after that apologizes for the alleged sins of our past and sets European hearts aflutter. During my year in Iraq, I looked into the eyes of more than one hundred Al Qaeda leaders and foot soldiers. What I saw was not an eager desire for “understanding” or “nuance” but an intense and focused love of death and destruction.

Our own soldiers don’t care that much about politics either. When I went to war, I figured I’d meet at least a few other political junkies. However, what I found were line troops who – with few exceptions – would rather watch ESPN than Fox or CNN and were only vaguely attuned to the political debates raging in Washington. The things that really mattered were the next mission, the next fight, and the next call home.

My entire life, I firmly believed the pen was mightier than the sword and that great armies moved under the inspiration of great men. Now, I’m not so sure. In one year, my small unit — an armored cavalry squadron of less than 1,000 men — liberated hundreds of square miles of Diyala Province from the darkest evil. It was not stirring rhetoric that stopped AQI terrorists from torturing and beheading entire villages, or shooting children in the face to “send a message,” or imposing the worst forms of Sharia law while they spent their days high on drugs, raping women, and watching Turkish porn. It was not the pen that cleared mine-laden roads or brought the first signs of economic life to communities trapped in grinding poverty.

As long as Obama continues to draw the sword, I don’t care much what he says with his pen. It should humble our political classes to know that the important decisions— the actions that truly decide the fate of nations — are made by Americans who care more about the NBA playoffs than a speech on the floor of the Senate, who rarely watch a cable news broadcast, and for whom Facebook is the lifeline for all the news that truly matters . . . of first steps, birthday parties, and little league baseball games far, far away.

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