(AP) Republican Catholics cool so far to Rick Santorum
By RACHEL ZOLL AND KASIE HUNT
Associated Press
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico
At El Sendero De La Cruz evangelical church, Rick Santorum sought prayers along with votes. He told the San Juan congregation that he felt “very blessed” to be with people of faith and said he can withstand the demands of campaigning because of the many people like them he meets while running for president.

“The first thing they almost always say to me, `I’m praying for you,'” Santorum said. “It works.”

It’s the kind of spirit-infused language that is helping Santorum connect with evangelical Republicans, who have fueled his strong showing in state after state. Yet, in one of the more puzzling developments among many in the GOP contest, he’s nowhere near as successful with his fellow Roman Catholics.

Across all states where Republican primary voters were asked their religion in exit polls, Mitt Romney, a Mormon, trounced Santorum among Catholics, with an average margin of victory above 20 percentage points. Even in Southern states, where Romney has struggled, Catholics broke his way.

On Sunday, overwhelmingly Catholic Puerto Rico was holding its primary.

Catholics haven’t voted as a bloc in decades, leading analysts to declare “the Catholic vote” as such doesn’t exist. Still, the results are surprising given that the former Pennsylvania senator puts Catholicism at the center of his public service and personal life.

Known for attending Mass almost daily, Santorum organized a Catholic study group for lawmakers when he served in Congress, has fought abortion and defended traditional marriage. He cites his faith for his support for humanitarian work, such as financing programs that fight AIDS in Africa. He has home-schooled his seven children and sent some to private schools affiliated with the Catholic movement Opus Dei. Santorum has said that growing up north of Pittsburgh, his parents expected him to attend church every Sunday without fail.

`’You had to basically be dead not to go,” he said in a 2005 interview with the New York Times.

Religious identity is not as much of a consideration for Catholic voters as it is for members of some other faiths.

Only 1 in 5 Catholics on average said it mattered “a great deal” that a candidate share their religious beliefs, compared with one-third of non-Catholics in exit polls that asked the question.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, also Catholic, on average trails Santorum among Catholics.

In the 2004 race, Democrat John Kerry was the first Catholic presidential candidate from a major party since John F. Kennedy in 1960. Still, Kerry lost Catholics in the general election to President George W. Bush, a Protestant who emphasized his born-again religious conversion.

“Just being Catholic by no means buys you anything in the Catholic vote anymore,” said Mark Gray, a researcher at Georgetown University’s Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate who specializes in American Catholics.

Santorum’s style of campaigning, in which he frames political issues in emotional, starkly moral terms of good and evil, is more common to evangelical than Catholic culture. He is often mistaken for a Protestant conservative, by both evangelicals and Catholics, according to a poll conducted last week by the Pew Research Center.

“One of the great blessings I’ve had in every political campaign is people underestimate me, people underestimate what God can do,” Santorum told the congregation at First Baptist Church of Bossier City, La., on Sunday.

Less than half of the Catholic Republicans surveyed knew Santorum’s faith, the survey showed, while 11 percent of Catholic Republicans and 35 percent of white evangelical Republicans thought Santorum was an evangelical.

“The rhetoric often comes out in a way that many people would take to be similar to how evangelicals express themselves,” said Russell Shaw, an author and writer for Our Sunday Visitor, a theologically conservative Catholic magazine, and a former spokesman for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. “No nuances and no holds barred.”

For most of his fellow Catholics, Santorum’s views are as likely to alienate as attract. Less than one-quarter of Catholics attend Mass weekly. Most use artificial contraception, support gay civil unions or marriage, and hold other views contrary to church teaching. Religious conservatives have called these Catholics “CINOs” _ Catholics in Name Only.

Santorum underscored his distance from other Catholics by saying recently that he “almost threw up” when he read Kennedy’s famous 1960 speech to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association addressing anti-Catholic bias. Kennedy had said, “I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute,” which Santorum and many religious conservatives interpret as endorsing a secular outlook. Santorum has said he wished he could take back the remark, but stood by his criticism of the speech.

Voters in a Republican primary, who are among the most motivated and active party members, are assumed to include more Catholics in line with Santorum, politically and religiously.

Deal Hudson, who was a Catholic outreach adviser to Bush’s presidential campaigns, rejects that idea. He believes Catholic Republicans include many faithful who aren’t as religiously active as Santorum and instead “pretty much behave like the general public.”

Exit polls generally don’t ask about church attendance, considered a critical measure of religious devotion, so there is no way to know for sure. But the exit polls, conducted for The Associated Press by Edison Research, do hold some clues about the gap between Catholic Republicans and Santorum.

In Ohio, where Romney narrowly edged Santorum, Catholic primary voters were less likely than Protestants to see Santorum as their best ideological match. The polls found that 52 percent of Protestant voters described Santorum’s positions as just right, compared with 42 percent of Catholics, while 28 percent of Catholics called Santorum too conservative. Even among Ohio voters who described themselves as conservative, more Protestants than Catholics said Santorum’s positions were about right _ 62 percent to 52 percent.

In Michigan, a majority of Catholics who backed Romney said they were strongly behind their candidate, while just 28 percent of Catholics who voted for Santorum said the same.

In fact, Catholics in the exit polls tend to look more like the typical Romney Republican. Catholics are less deeply conservative and less likely to back the Tea Party movement. They have more formal education than non-Catholics and higher incomes, with 74 percent reporting annual household incomes over $50,000, compared with 67 percent of non-Catholics.

Catholics are also less likely than other Christians to hesitate over Romney’s Mormonism, even though the Catholic Church, like many faith traditions, does not recognize Mormons as part of historical Christianity, although Mormons themselves do.

“One reason Catholics don’t have a religious problem with it is because they’ve been a persecuted religious group,” said Hudson, chairman of Catholic Advocate, a conservative advocacy group that aims to politically organize Catholics. “Catholics know what it’s like for people to think their beliefs are crazy.”

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AP Religion Writer Rachel Zoll reported from New York. AP Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta in Washington and AP writer Andrew DeMillo in Bossier City, La., contributed to this report.