Paul Weyrich, key Christian Right activist, dies

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Paul Weyrich, the man who reportedly coined the term “Moral Majority,” has died. Weyrich was a leader of the Christian Right movement virtually since its inception.

Weyrich initially supported Mitt Romney for president in 2008, but later deeply regretted the move, according to an article in World Magazine. The better candidate, he told fellow activists, would’ve been Mike Huckabee.

An AP story about Weyrich’s death continues on the jump.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Conservative activist Paul Weyrich, who coined the phrase “moral majority” and helped turn social conservatives into a powerful force in the Republican Party, died Thursday. He was 66.
Weyrich’s death was announced by the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think thank that he had helped to create.

Republican National Committee Chairman Mike Duncan said Weyrich “was instrumental in the development of conservative thought” in America.

As the first president of the Heritage Foundation and the leader of other conservative organizations, Weyrich’s service “embodied and further advanced the Republican Party’s core values of limited government, lower taxes and individual responsibility,” added Duncan.

Lee Edwards, a Heritage Foundation scholar and a friend, said Weyrich had suffered from ill health in recent years and had both legs amputated.

“He was a dedicated conservative and patriot, an excellent strategist,” Edwards said. “He had a very sharp sense of humor , which he employed at all times.”

At his death, Weyrich was chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Foundation, a conservative think tank. His latest commentary, posted on the foundation’s Web site with Thursday’s date, was titled: “The next Conservatism, a Serious Agenda for the Future.”

In it he wrote: “It is the worst of times because conservatives appear lost and without a serious agenda or a means of explaining such an agenda to the public.” But he also “it is the best of times” because conservative thinkers are generating ideas and proposals for a ’Next Conservatism,’ which will lead to substantive debate about the nation’s core principles and its future direction.

Weyrich, who lived in northern Virginia, was one of three founders of the Moral Majority, and later had a hand in creating the Christian Coalition.

Weyrich got his start as a reporter in Milwaukee, and came to Washington in 1967 as press secretary to Sen. Gordon Allott, R-Colo. Six year later, he founded the Heritage Foundation, and the next year the Free Congress Foundation. At a 1979 gathering of religious leaders, Weyrich talked of a “moral majority” in the country. The name stuck. Over the next decade, the group led by the Rev. Jerry Falwell energized the conservative movement as a political force.

By the late 1990s, Weyrich was lamenting that “I no longer believe that there is a moral majority.” If there were, he said, “Bill Clinton would have been driven out of office months ago.”

Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, said Weyrich “didn’t over-intellectualize about Christians ’jumping into the fray.’ He recognized early that the fray had jumped onto us.”

6 Responses to “Paul Weyrich, key Christian Right activist, dies”

  1. José Says:

    Frank, why did social conservatives not embrace Gov. Huckabee when they gave so much love and affection to Gov. Palin? Their policy positions are much the same, but Huckabee has a better résumé and he’s obviously smarter too. I saw him on the Daily Show the other night, plugging his new book. He was very funny, but unlike Palin it was intentional.

  2. Frank replies Says:

    Good question. Basically, Jose, some social conservatives outsmarted themselves. Rather than going with the guy they liked most (Huckabee), they decided to go with the guy they considered most electable (Mitt Romney). Weyrich was in this category, and spent the rest of the campaign kicking himself for putting pragmatism ahead of idealism.

    Gov. Huckabee is a good communicator, he’s got a beefier resume than Palin, he’s got a quick wit and he’s got a compelling life story. But he struggled to raise money and to build an effective nationwide campaign organization. He also was an outsider and he failed to stick to the party line early in 2008. Apparently he hadn’t gotten the memo reading “The fundamentals of the economy are strong. There is no recession. We’re just a nation of whiners…” Plus, Huckabee had raised some taxes in Arkansas (alienating economic conservatives) and he’d commuted sentences or granted pardons in a bunch of cases, a fact opponents would’ve tried to exploit in the fall. On top of that, he had received substantial campaign help from prosperity gospel televangelists, a point Democrats would have played up. Romney supporters didn’t want Huckabee on the ticket as it would’ve made Huckabee the front-runner in 2012. And the fact that Huckabee was an ordained minister probably [I'm guessing] undercut his chances with McCain.

  3. UKLutheran Says:

    Speaking of Christian Right activists who have passed on… I almost jumped out of my seat when I saw this comment in the New York Times today…

    “In the ’08 elections, pro-life Catholics emerged as the dominant voice of the religious right. To be sure, Mr. Obama won a majority among Catholics. Yet the sharpest anti-Obama rhetoric from religious leaders came not from old culture warriors like Jerry Falwell or Pat Robertson but rather from some Catholic clergymen.”

    Perhaps someone should tell John Allen Jr. that there is a pretty good reason why there was little anti-Obama rhetoric coming from Jerry Falwell in the ’08 elections.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/19/opinion/19allen.html?ref=opinion

  4. Caleb Powers Says:

    That’s funny, UKLutheran. Having grown up in the country, I always read the obituaries in the newspaper first, but perhaps Mr. Allen doesn’t do that.

  5. HopingForABetterWorld Says:

    It’s Judgment day Paul. “What’s that you say Jesus, you never knew me?”

  6. elaygee Says:

    He couldn’t have died fast enough or in enough pain to pay for all the evil he brought into the world.

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