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Romney, seen as the Republicans' early front-runner, may have the toughest task in wooing religious conservatives. As a Senate candidate and one-term governor in Massachusetts, he supported legalized abortion, gay rights and gun control. Romney has reversed his stands on those positions. Since speakers didn't take audience questions at the Faith and Freedom event, he had an easier time Friday than he will in other settings. He cited "our belief in the sanctity of human life," and said marriage should apply to "one man and one woman." Romney blamed Obama for the nation's high unemployment. Job losses can push marriages to the breaking point, he said, calling it "a moral crisis." Rep. Ron Paul of Texas mixed quotes from the Bible's first book of Samuel with his familiar libertarian proposals, such as returning to the gold standard. All these lines got applause. Still, a sense of unease sometimes hung over the event. Organizers acknowledged that some religious conservatives are not happy with the heavy emphasis on economic matters these days. The audience members sat silently when Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour urged them to embrace the eventual Republican presidential nominee despite the certainty that they will disagree with him or her on some issues. "Purity is the enemy of victory," Barbour said. Since he decided against his own presidential bid, he said, he took it upon himself to deliver "the Dutch uncle talk." The crowd warmed up when Barbour said the overriding goal, regardless who is nominated, is to make Obama a one-term president.
[Associated
Press;
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