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- <text id=93TT2206>
- <title>
- Sep. 13, 1993: Profile:Ralph Reed
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 13, 1993 Leap Of Faith
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 58
- Fighting For God and the Right Wing
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Supple in tactics but rigid in goals, Ralph Reed tries to give
- the religious right a softer, modern face
- </p>
- <p>By LAURENCE I. BARRETT
- </p>
- <p> Redemption earns even more glory among evangelicals than consistent
- faith and virtue. And for Ralph Reed, sudden self-reform has
- always come easily. A heavy smoker as an undergraduate at the
- University of Georgia in the early 1980s, he pitched his pack
- of Marlboro Lights out a car window one day and never bought
- another. Booze was also a problem, so he went instantly dry
- during the summer after graduation. Weeks later, sipping soda
- in a Washington saloon as some pals drank harder stuff, he was
- seized by a thirst for "deeper spiritual meaning" in his life.
- Reed chose a church at random from the Yellow Pages, went there
- the next morning and soon became a born-again charismatic, abandoning
- the genteel Methodism in which he had been reared.
- </p>
- <p> Acts of contrition followed. To a victim of one of his nasty
- ploys as a college Republican, he wrote, "I was the cause of
- all the dirty politics and unsavory behavior...Politics
- for me had degenerated into a cheap play for power. I now realize
- that politics is a noble calling to serve God and my fellow
- man."
- </p>
- <p> Today Reed strives, by his lights at least, to make politics
- serve those causes as executive director of Christian Coalition,
- the advocacy group founded by Pat Robertson four years ago.
- Reed's organizational and strategic talents have made the coalition
- the most potent unit within what its leaders call the profamily
- movement. He is also becoming a prophet and a public promoter
- of the conservative Christian cause in general. When he experiences
- an epiphany these days, the event is complex and political rather
- than religious and personal. His changing visions become the
- subject of TV schmooze shows and Washington seminars, as Robertson
- gives him increasing license to preach as well as plan. With
- a choirboy's serene phiz, and a resume that includes a doctorate
- in American history as well as many innings of political hardball,
- Reed, at 32, has made himself the model for the latest incarnation
- of the religious right.
- </p>
- <p> This week Christian Coalition holds its annual Road to Victory
- conference. For the first time, the gathering of 2,000 cultural
- warriors will be in Washington rather than Virginia Beach, and
- will be open to press coverage. To overcome the group's conspiratorial
- image, Reed decided on the motif of a coming-out party. In a
- bow to political ecumenism, he persuaded David Wilhelm, chairman
- of the Democratic National Committee, to be the token liberal
- among dozens of conservative speakers. The movement remains
- overwhelmingly white and has roots in the backlash against the
- civil rights revolution; so Reed commissioned a national poll
- of minority churchgoers, hoping to find some unlikely constituency
- among their ranks. Sure enough, this week he will announce figures
- showing that on some social issues, devout blacks, Hispanics
- and Asian Americans sympathize with religious-right views.
- </p>
- <p> Reed's goal is to give the movement a gentler, more catholic
- visage. He wants to make peace with mainstream Republicans while
- continuing the movement's war with secular liberals. The religious
- right must broaden its agenda, he believes, because "we have
- allowed ourselves to be ghettoized by a narrow band of issues
- like abortion, homosexual rights and prayer in school." Even
- the majority of Evangelicals, he argues, are more interested
- in taxes, crime and the quality of education. Becoming more
- ecumenical will entail making alliances of convenience with
- conventional conservatives who, for example, do not favor outlawing
- abortion. This strikes some followers as heresy. To Reed, it
- is necessary for the movement's survival.
- </p>
- <p> Last year the religious right suffered a fiasco because of George
- Bush's defeat. Robertson and Reed had assumed early on that
- Bush would narrowly edge out Clinton. Thus, although they had
- little affection for Bush, they helped check the movement of
- social conservatives toward Pat Buchanan. Their expectation
- was that Christian Coalition would get credit, and legitimacy,
- for securing the critical margin of support. In exchange, Bush's
- handlers accepted many of Reed's choices for delegates to the
- convention and allowed the religious right to pack the platform
- committee. The upshot: Bush seemed a prisoner of his party's
- extreme right, and the conservatives took a mostly bum rap for
- Bush's defeat.
- </p>
- <p> At the local level, Christian Coalition had pursued a combative
- strategy. It sought to take over G.O.P. committees, ousting
- complacent regulars indifferent to the coalition's Bible-based
- agenda. In some intraparty contests, as well as races for public
- offices, the coalition's candidates kept quiet about their affiliation.
- Close to Election Day, bursts of church-centered politicking
- showed what was going on. Reed made the mistake of bragging
- in a few interviews about what became known as "stealth tactics,"
- talking up the political benefits of guerrilla methods. "You
- don't know it's over," he once said of unsuspecting opponents,
- "until you're in a body bag." That inflammatory language made
- its way into data bases, to be recycled frequently.
- </p>
- <p> For mainstream Republicans seeking to put the Evangelicals back
- in their pews--from which they would supply votes but not
- leadership--the religious right's image as sinister, rigid
- and exclusionary was excellent material. Ditto for liberal opponents
- like People for the American Way, which monitors the religious
- right and scores points from its every excess. After the election,
- Reed scurried to recoup. "This stealth thing is bad for the
- movement," he announced. "It isn't the future. It's the past,
- if anything." Reed struggled to practice diversity, conservative
- style. When he opened a Washington lobbying office, he appointed
- a Jew, Marshall Wittmann, to head it. In last spring's New York
- City school board elections, Reed attracted some Hispanic and
- African-American activists and got cooperation from the Roman
- Catholic hierarchy. Christian Coalition also advertised its
- participation.
- </p>
- <p> To Arthur Kropp, the liberal Republican who heads People for
- the American Way, Reed is a more dangerous adversary than earlier
- religious-right leaders precisely because he knows when to be
- flexible. "He shows good political sense," Kropp says, "learning
- as he goes." But Reed's suppleness in strategy doesn't mean
- that his or his movement's basic goals have changed. Like other
- friends, Roberta Combs, the Christian Coalition leader in South
- Carolina, has no doubt of his constancy. "I consider him the
- Christian Lee Atwater," she says--high praise in the home
- state of the late conservative G.O.P. leader. Like Atwater and
- other legendary Southern pols, Reed combines a bent for the
- long view with an intense desire to win the fracas de jour.
- But Reed, with his innocent good looks and radio announcer's
- diction, is a much smoother article.
- </p>
- <p> He attributes his ability to adapt to his upbringing. Ralph
- Eugene Reed Sr. was a Navy doctor training to be a surgeon when
- Ralph Jr. was born in Portsmouth, Virginia--a few blocks away
- from Pat Robertson's first broadcast studio. When the boy entered
- high school in Toccoa, in northern Georgia, it was the seventh
- town (and fifth state) that the family had called home. By then
- little Buddy Reed had learned three things about himself: he
- could fit in quickly, loved history and had a gift for politics.
- </p>
- <p> He liked people and books rather than sports and rock 'n' roll.
- He consumed biographies of Presidents and remembers being awed
- by William Shirer's The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. "It
- showed me at an early age--I was about eight--the impact
- of politics," Reed recalls. "I learned that politics had serious
- consequences for millions of people, a life-and-death business."
- But it could also be fun. In junior high school, outside Miami,
- his posters when he ran for student council president read,
- ELECT RALPH REED, THE LITTLE GIANT. Most kids didn't get the
- allusion to Stephen Douglas, but they liked the play on Reed's
- slight stature. He won the election.
- </p>
- <p> At the University of Georgia, Reed went out for the debating
- society, the College Republicans and the newspaper, the Red
- and Black, where he eventually had a weekly column. "He was
- a fire-eating Republican," recalls Mike Tidwell, who worked
- on the paper, "on the far right of every issue. But he was provocative
- and entertaining, like Rush Limbaugh today." Reed also rushed
- up the leadership ladder, winning the chairmanship of the College
- Republicans at his school, then of the statewide organization.
- In the summer of 1981, as Reaganomics was being enacted, he
- served as a Senate intern, then remained in the capital for
- a semester working with the National College Republicans. Returning
- to school in 1982, he felt imbued with "a mission, a purpose.
- I knew what I was about. There was no ambiguity." The mission
- was to make campus conservatives as active and iconoclastic
- as liberals had been for years. The favored means was to mount
- demonstrations and petition drives that stimulated adrenaline,
- and Reed was a natural at that.
- </p>
- <p> It was a frenetic time in his life. He was finishing his senior
- thesis and preparing to move to a new job with the National
- College Republicans. In between, he got himself fired from the
- Red and Black for plagiarism. At the College Republicans' national
- convention, Reed helped defeat a moderate by targeting his preppy
- garb; Reed gave out hundreds of buttons showing a pink tie with
- a red line through it. Rebecca Hagelin, a protege then and still
- a friend, says Reed was considered "the best practitioner of
- kiddie politics" but was so "addicted to the excitement" that
- he frequently strayed across ethical boundaries.
- </p>
- <p> After a successful stint as executive director of the College
- Republicans, Reed moved from Washington to Raleigh and set up
- a conservative organization with an evangelical tint, Students
- for America. In 1984 North Carolina offered the country's hottest
- Senate race, Jesse Helms vs. Jim Hunt, and Reed wanted his new
- group to be in on the action. It was at the Helms victory party
- that a pretty 16-year-old Helms volunteer introduced herself
- to Reed. Jo Anne Young thought he was about 19 and "really cute."
- It would be nearly two years before they had their first official
- date, on the occasion of her high school graduation. By that
- time Ralph was taking a recess from politics, obtaining a Ph.D.
- at Emory University. "I had the feeling all along that I was
- going to marry him," Jo Anne says, "and even announced that
- to friends. The idea scared him to death." Two months ago, the
- Reeds celebrated their sixth anniversary, which fell on a Sunday,
- by taking their three tots to church.
- </p>
- <p> Reed went to Emory on a scholarship, intending to switch to
- academic life for good because he had decided that politics
- was unstable as a career. His dissertation, on the early history
- of church-related colleges, is still remembered. "It was a first-rate
- piece of work," says Professor James Roark, "but I'm not sure
- Ralph would want it published today." The paper criticized some
- sectarian schools for trading off their religious heritage in
- exchange for endowments. In fact, Reed is proud of its argument:
- that traditional Christian values--as born-again conservatives
- define them--deserve to be protected.
- </p>
- <p> The same cause lured Reed back to politics. In January 1989,
- when they met for the first time at a Washington banquet, Robertson
- told Reed of his plans for a new organization. Jerry Falwell's
- Moral Majority was about to collapse. George Bush's accession
- threatened a return of country-club Republicanism. Reed had
- supported Jack Kemp rather than Robertson in the 1988 primaries,
- but no matter. Robertson knew of Reed's religious conversion;
- Robertson's cable show, The 700 Club, had done a piece on it.
- He also knew Reed's reputation as a conservative organizer.
- Reed wrote a memorandum on how the new group should be run.
- Nine months later, he was putting that prospectus into practice
- as Christian Coalition's executive director.
- </p>
- <p> With four years on the job, Reed is still tinkering with the
- means of his mission but remains confident that he has his ends
- right. When addressing outsiders these days, he makes the reasonable
- proposition that the religious right merely wants a place at
- the table. To followers in Charleston, South Carolina, not long
- ago, he described the dimension of that place: "Our ambition
- is to be larger and more effective than both political parties
- combined." That is no recent epiphany; to Reed, it is the gospel.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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