A Southern
Baptist leader said Tuesday in Nashville that
evangelical voters might tolerate a divorced
presidential candidate but they have deep doubts about
Republican hopeful Rudy Giuliani, who has been married
three times. Richard Land, head of public policy for the
Southern Baptist Convention, told the Associated Press
that evangelicals believe the former New York City
mayor showed a lack of character during his divorce
from second wife, television personality Donna Hanover.
"I mean, this is
divorce on steroids," Land said. "To publicly
humiliate your wife in that way, and your children. That's
rough. I think that's going to be an awfully hard sell, even
if he weren't pro-choice and pro-gun control."
Giuliani married
his longtime companion, Judith Nathan, in 2003. They had
dated publicly while Giuliani was married to Hanover. His
first marriage ended in an annulment.
A Giuliani staff
member referred calls on Land's statement to Giuliani's
exploratory committee, which did not have an immediate
response Tuesday night.
Giuliani already
has a challenge in winning over conservatives who make
up the Republican Party's base and view him with skepticism
because his moderate positions on social issues such
as gays, guns, and abortion have been seen as too
liberal.
Land noted that
Republican presidential candidate John McCain has been
married twice but said the Arizona senator has acknowledged
his part in the failure of his first marriage.
"It's a molehill
compared to Giuliani's mountain," Land said. "When
you're a war hero [like McCain], you have less to prove on
the character front."
Many polls
identify Giuliani as the front-runner in the Republican
presidential primary, followed by McCain and former
Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.
Southern Baptists
have been among the most vocal of conservative
Christian groups in support of the Bush administration. But
they and other evangelicals are struggling to find a
consensus presidential candidate who embraces their
stands against same-sex marriage and abortion. (Rose
French, AP)