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Far-right social issues overshadow the economy in GOP politics

The Associated Press

All of a sudden, abortion, contraception and same-sex marriage are at the center of American political discourse, with the struggling –though improving – economy pushed to the background.

Social issues don’t typically dominate the discussion in shaky economies. But they do raise emotions important to factors like voter turnout. And they can be key tools for political candidates clamoring for attention, campaign cash or just a change of subject in a presidential election year.

“The public is reacting to what it’s hearing about,” said Andrew Kohut, president of the Pew Research Center.

The economy still tops the list of voters’ concerns and probably will still shape this presidential election. And it’s not yet known to what extent, if at all, social issues will influence voters on Election Day.

But for the moment, far-right GOP candidate Rick Santorum is surging in the polls. Santorum, whose campaign is centered on his personal crusade against gays and choice, is tied with frontrunner Mitt Romney in the latest Fox News poll. His surge follows victories in caucuses earlier this week in Missouri, Colorado and Minnesota.

Until now, the dominant political talking point has been jobs, jobs, jobs. That’s been the governing mantra of both parties since the economic bust of 2008, through President Barack Obama’s sweeping overhaul of health insurance and the 2010 elections that returned control of the House of Representatives to Republicans. Since then, voters have turned angry while remaining anxious over the economy’s crawl toward stability. Republicans have been keen to blame the slow-motion progress on Obama in their drive to deny him a second term.

Then, as the Republican nomination fight churned with no resolution in sight, the economy began to grow. Unemployment rates dipped. And a cascade of cultural political developments inspired a new set of talking points for the year’s crop of political hopefuls:

– Supporters of Planned Parenthood, which provides abortion services as well as screenings for breast cancer, helped force the resignation of Susan G. Komen For the Cure executive Karen Handel after the breast cancer research group cut grants to the organization, then reversed course.

– Catholic bishops began sparring with the White House over a new requirement that Catholic-affiliated institutions, such as hospitals and schools, must provide insurance coverage for birth control for their employees even though the church opposes artificial contraception.

– A federal appeals court in California struck down the state’s same-sex marriage ban, prompting criticism from the Republican presidential candidates and others who charged that unelected judges were overruling the will of voters.

For both parties, social policy puts key constituencies at stake. Republicans are courting the religious conservatives that populate their base, including Catholics in battleground states like Ohio and Pennsylvania. Obama, meanwhile, is trying to preserve support among women, moderates and independents.

Wednesday was a key pivot point.

Hours after Republican presidential hopeful Santorum won all three states holding votes Tuesday night and stalled frontrunner Mitt Romney’s modest winning streak, congressional leaders issued tightly coordinated statements on another subject: The White House’s policy on birth control coverage was a government mandate that threatens religious freedom and violates the Constitution.

In a floor speech rare for a speaker of the House, John Boehner, a Catholic, accused the administration of undermining some of the country’s most vital institutions, such as Catholic charities, schools and hospitals. He demanded that Obama rescind the policy and pledged that Congress would if Obama didn’t.

“This attack by the federal government on religious freedom in our country cannot stand, and will not stand,” Boehner said.

But where Republicans cast the White House’s contraception policy as an assault on the freedom of religion itself, Democrats argued for the preservation of affordable birth control for women. The White House circulated letters from women’s groups defending the policy and signaled on Tuesday that a compromise was possible.

Former Obama aide Jen Psaki suggested the uproar was due in part to the Republican nomination fight, noting that the administration’s directive requiring church-affiliated employers to cover birth control for their employees was based on a policy most used by states.

“Where has the outrage been up to now?” Psaki said.

On the presidential campaign trail, the Republican candidates competing for conservative votes presented themselves as foes of any efforts to remove religion and morals from public discourse. Some described those efforts in the language of war.

Romney, a Mormon, is embracing social issues in a way he hasn’t to this point in the campaign as he fends off threats from two challengers. The Obama administration, he says, is waging “an assault on religion.”

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a Catholic, says Democrats have ‘declared war on the Catholic Church.”

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