Republican presidential candidates who’ve typically shied away from contentious social issues attempted to thread the needle on the role of faith in government Thursday during the final GOP presidential debate before the Iowa caucuses — a nominating contest shaped more forcefully by evangelical voters than those in other early states.
Asked about Kentucky clerk Kim Davis, who spent five nights behind bars last year for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples on religious grounds, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie maintained his position that “the law needs to be followed.”
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“If Ms. Davis wanted to step aside … there should be someone else in that office who it didn’t violate their conscience so they could follow the law of the state of Kentucky,” said Christie. “I never said Ms. Davis should lose her job or that she had to do it, but I did say that the person who came in for the license needed to get it.”
Christie’s response was far less supportive of Davis than those of some of his rivals, such as Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who was on hand when Davis was released from jail last year and has hosted two “religious liberty” rallies urging broader cover for Christians to deny service to same-sex couples. Cruz did not weigh in on Davis during Thursday’s debate.








