Rick Perry Is the New Darling of U.S. Evangelicals

By Dan Gilgoff, CNN.com Religion Editor

(CNN) "“ Evangelical pastor Jim Garlow has met Texas Gov. Rick Perry only once, but the politician left quite an impression.

Garlow, who is based in California, where he helped lead the campaign to ban same-sex marriage in the state, was attending a big prayer rally that Perry sponsored last weekend in Houston when he and his wife were invited backstage with the governor.

"My wife has stage 4 cancer, and Perry ended up talking with her quite a bit and praying for her and her healing,"� Garlow said. "We spent a fair amount of time backstage."�

Though Garlow notes that the meeting was personal, not political, he is hardly the only conservative evangelical leader who has begun forming a relationship with Perry in recent days.

As the Texas governor has mulled a bid for the presidency over the last few months "“ a source familiar with his plans says he will formally announce his candidacy on Saturday "“ Perry and his circle have reached out to Christian activists who will be influential in the GOP primaries.

At the same time, many of those conservative leaders - underwhelmed by the Republican presidential field so far - have contacted Perry and those close to him to inquire about his commitment to causes like oppositionto  abortion and same-sex marriage.

The flurry of meetings and phone calls portends a primary campaign that is likely to rely heavily on evangelical support, presenting a serious challenge to socially conservative candidates like Tim Pawlenty and Michele Bachmann and creating the possibility of two-person race between Perry, a Christian Right darling, and the more establishment Mitt Romney.

"There's been a significant attempt by him and his staff to reach out to conservative Christian leaders and it's now going to a new level,"� says Mat Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Council, a conservative Christian advocacy group, talking about Perry's outreach.

"Perry is not making the same mistake that McCain made,"� Staver said. "McCain wanted Christian conservative votes but didn't want to get too close to Christian conservative leaders."�

Kelly Shackelford, a Texas-based evangelical activist who has been close to Perry for 20 years, says he has fielded roughly 100 phone calls in recent weeks from Christian activists across the country who are eager to learn more about Perry.

"People are calling and asking, "�Is this guy really a social conservative and a fiscal conservative?' and it's easy to say yes because I've seen it,"� said Shackelford, who runs a conservative legal advocacy group called the Liberty Institute. "As far as proving himself, he's been the most solid conservative I've seen anywhere in the country."�

Shackelford says Perry has signed more anti-abortion legislation than any governor in the country, including a recent measure that requires women seeking an abortion in Texas to view a picture of the embryo or fetus and hear a description of its development before having the procedure.

Perry is also a supporter of a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage.

Many of the activists checking in with Shackelford are concerned that Pawlenty and Bachmann, the other Republican candidates popular among conservative evangelicals, aren't generating enough support and have limited appeal outside the evangelical subculture.

"They want a candidate who is not only socially and fiscally conservative, but who could actually raise money,"� says Shackelford. "Perry can bridge the establishment and grass roots sides of the party and that's really hard to find."�

Perry, who has presided over a state that has seen strong job growth amid the economic downturn, is considered popular among business groups.

"Rick Perry has the potential to energize tea party and social conservatives, as well as attract endorsements and contributions from GOP donors and elected officials,"� said Ralph Reed, who leads the Faith and Freedom Coalition.

"Not unlike another Texas governor, George W. Bush, he can bridge the establishment wing of the party and the conservative grass roots,"� said Reed, the former executive director of the Christian Coalition. "That's quite a combination, and my sense is he will reshuffle this race in a significant way."�

Romney, the current establishment favorite, is unpopular among many conservative Christian activists because of his onetime support for abortion rights and because of a health care law he signed as governor of Massachusetts that mandates coverage.

And Romney, a Mormon, faces obstacles in connecting with evangelical voters along religious lines, as Perry, Pawlenty and Bachmann appear to be doing.

A CNN/ORC International Poll released Thursday showed 15% of Republican and independent voters who lean toward the GOP picked Perry as their choice for the Republican nomination.

That put Perry, still not officially a candidate, just 2 percentage points behind Romney, considered the front-runner in the nominating process. Romney's advantage over Perry is within the survey's sampling error.

Much of the evangelical organizing around Perry grew out of last weekend's Houston prayer rally, called The Response, which Perry began organizing last year.

The event, cosponsored by conservative evangelical groups, was aimed at bringing God's help to a "nation in crisis,"� and drew thousands of worshippers.

"I got involved in The Response three or four months ago and at that time, the Perry for president push was not the issue," said Garlow, who is supporting Newt Gingrich for president but is disappointed at the former House Speaker's performance so far. "It became that way primarily after Huckabee pulled his name out of the race."�

Indeed, many conservative activists began calling on Perry to run only after former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee announced in May that he would not seek the White House.

"I was astounded at the pressure on him to run - you felt it building and we were trying to plan this prayer event and we're saying, "�How do we keep this out of politics because this is about Christ?' "�

'How do we keep this out of politics because this is about Christ?'

He is a governor who is running for president so it is going to be political. If he were a religious leader with no political ambition then it would not be political. However, the fact of the matter is that he is a political leader who is bringing religion in to politics.

This has nothing to do with Perry's religious beliefs, but... Am I the only one who finds it odd that two years or so ago Rick Perry gave a speech suggesting his state – Texas – could and possibly should secede from the union of the United States and NOW he wants to be the President of those same United States he no longer wanted his state to be a part of?

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