WASHINGTON — Sens. Ted Cruz and Rand Paul, former Sen. Rick Santorum, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, and former Gov. Mike Huckabee sought to win points with Christian conservatives Friday at the 2014 Values Voter Summit, just months before the 2016 Republican presidential primary battle begins in earnest.
Cruz’s sermon-like speech won the crowd’s support easily — the sheer excitement in the packed ballroom suggested the Texas lawmaker will fare well in the presidential straw poll to be held here on Saturday. Meanwhile, Paul, Kentucky’s junior senator, tried to sell the crowd on how his libertarian politics are necessary for virtue and family values.
Santorum, on the other hand, saw a lesser reception. Perhaps it was due to the after-lunch billing or just today’s speech, but the crowd was more unresponsive during his speech, his ninth appearance at the nine-year-old Summit.
He earned just five moments of applause during his address, whereas Cruz’s speech was punctuated by regular applause, hoots, and hollers. Santorum had social conservatives behind him in a big way in 2012, so his reception may signal a decline of his social conservatives’ support of the former senator.
The Louisiana governor didn’t initially rile up the crowd, but his jokes, family stories, and comfortable, off-the-cuff delivery gained momentum as he spoke. By the end of the speech, he had the audience laughing and excited. “If you like your religious liberty, you can keep your religious liberty,” Jindal joked to crowd guffaws.
Arkansas’ Huckabee sounded quite a bit like a candidate, when he structured his speech around the infamous 2008 Hillary Clinton ‘when the phone rings’ campaign ad. “I think we know who we don’t want answering the phone,” he said early in his speech.
Cruz, Paul, Santorum, Jindal, and Huckabee are considered likely to compete for the 2016 GOP presidential nomination. Santorum noted that he’d be out with a new book in February, just as 2016 campaigning cycle kicks off in earnest.
Cruz—who won last year’s straw poll two weeks after his 21-hour Senate floor faux-filibuster against Obamacare—reminded attendees of the one-year anniversary of that all night talk-a-thon.
His address was based loosely around Psalm 30 and predicted a kind of salvation from the Obama presidency.
“In 2017, with a Republican president in office, we’re going to sign legislation repealing every word of Obamacare,” he said. “Joy cometh in the morning.”
He pitched himself as values-driven Republican with a plan to “turn this country around.”
“There are people in Washington who say Republicans to win have to abandon values,” he said. “Our values are who we are. Our values are why we’re here.”
Cruz skipped the podium and teleprompter other attendees used, walking around the stage and feeding off the crowd’s approval. His easy demeanor gave the speech a campaign feel that was particularly obvious when he suggested a day-long debate with the likely 2016 Democratic frontrunner, Hillary Clinton, over the Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby ruling. The court ruled in that case that closely held companies with religious objections to birth control could refuse to abide by the mandate under Obamacare to provide it to employees.
“Me? I’ll stand with the nuns,” Cruz said, referring the Little Sisters of the Poor, who are suing the government over the contraception mandate.
Unlike Cruz’s easy comfort, Paul appeared a bit less at home, standing behind a podium and reading from the teleprompter, and speaking quickly.
Paul—whose libertarian views don’t always sync with those of Christian conservatives — said his policies were key to preserving family values.
“What American needs is not a politician with more promises, what America really needs is a revival,” Paul said, earning his first cheers of the speech. He went on to argue that that the revival depends on fusing freedom and virtue together.
“Liberty is exactly essential to virtue,” he said.
Paul championed his anti-abortion stance; he was introduced to the crowd by a video montage of his own pro-life remarks interspersed with sonograms of babies in the womb. “I’m one who will march for life and who will stand up in defense of life as long as I’m privileged to hold office,” Paul told the crowd.









