GREENVILLE, South Carolina — Republican presidential hopefuls competed to wow conservative activists with tough talk on foreign policy and hard lines on social issues in this early primary state at Saturday’s Freedom Summit, a candidate showcase sponsored by Citizens United.
Scheduled speakers include Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, businesswoman Carly Fiorina, former U.N. ambassador John Bolton, real estate magnate Donald Trump, and former New York governor George Pataki, among others. Fiorina and Carson each declared their presidential candidacies this week. Cruz and Rubio have also announced their runs, while the rest are still weighing whether to formally launch a campaign.
Walker, who will take off for a trip to Israel this weekend to burnish his Middle East credentials, devoted much of his speech to national security, or what he termed instead “safety” issues.
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“National security is something you read about in a newspaper — safety is something you feel,” he said.
Turning to the economy, Walker touted his blue-collar background while simultaneously defending big banks from criticism.
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“[The American dream is] not out of reach because of Wall Street, it’s out of reach because of K Street,” he said, referring to the lobbyist-heavy Washington neighborhood. “We need to get government out of the way and put power back in the hands of the American people.”
Walker was joined by other candidates who also devoted hefty portions of their speeches to criticizing nuclear negotiations with Iran and pledging further action against Islamic State militants. Rubio told the audience he would model his approach to terrorism on Liam Neeson’s catchphrase in the film “Taken”: “We will look for you, we will find you and we will kill you.”
Fiorina, the former Hewlett-Packard CEO who has fielded criticism for a lack of experience serving in political office, rattled off a laundry list of actions she would take to combat ISIS.
“We can arm the Kurds as they have been asking us to do for years, we can share intelligence with the Egyptians, we can give the Jordanians bombs and material so they can help fight this fight for us,” she said.
Social issues also got plenty of play in the evangelical-heavy state. Cruz called out unnamed rivals for not forcefully defending Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act after it came under fire from critics who accused it of enabling businesses to discriminate against gays. Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, himself a potential candidate, eventually agreed to change the law to clarify its intent.
“There are candidates running in 2016, even candidates in the Republican field, who when Indiana was being battled, they were nowhere to be found,” Cruz said.
While candidates generally sided with the Indiana law, some were less enthusiastic than others — Walker reacted to the backlash by noting his own state does not take the same approach.
Jindal, who is backing new legislation in Louisiana that would protect businesses and individuals who object to gay marriage, also highlighted his support for Indiana’s law.
“We shouldn’t have to choose between following our scripture, following our consciences, and operating our businesses,” he said.
Carson waded into the issue, as well: “The fact of the matter is what we do need to make sure we never do in this country is force our beliefs on someone else, and that needs to go in both directions,” he said. “So the left doesn’t get to force their beliefs on anybody else.”
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Cruz and Jindal each mentioned the recent attack in Garland, Texas, at an event devoted to drawing the prophet Muhammad — a practice some deem prohibited by the Quran. The Texas senator thanked police officers for shooting the suspected attackers and helping them “meet their virgins,” while Jindal called on Muslim leaders to condemn adherents who commit violent acts by name and say they’re going “straight to hell, where they belong” for their actions.
“When you say things like that, the left will call you racist, they will call you anti-Muslim,” Jindal added.
Carson has been one of the most aggressive culture warriors in the field and suggested this week to CNBC that gay marriage could lead to legal bigamy or incest, but he told the press on Saturday that he was trying to soften his language in general.









