My second publication is now available online at The City, the new (and free!) journal from the up-and-coming Houston Baptist University.
I have much more to say about the piece later--including commenting on related events that have occurred since I wrote it--but for now I thought Mere-O readers would be interested in reading the piece itself. As always, comments and questions are welcome.
From the beginning, then:
In the 2008 Presidential campaign, the dominant story once again focused on how the evangelical voting bloc would align itself. In late 2007, amidst stories that the influence of the so-called “values voters” was waning, evangelicals launched Mike Huckabee’s previously struggling campaign into the national limelight. Though Huckabee’s inability to move beyond his evangelical base ensured his influence would not last, his politics and campaign drove a wedge not only between the evangelical public and the evangelical elite, but between the evangelical public and the Republican intelligentsia, most of whom offered nothing but loathing for the Arkansas governor.