Races to Watch: Governor of Michigan

Gov. Jennifer Granholm vs. Dick DeVos and the economy.

Christianity Today has identified four key races to follow on Election Night. These contests feature debates about issues of special concern to evangelicals.

How bad is Michigan’s economy? A Republican political neophyte who started with little name recognition has mounted a credible challenge to a Democratic governor touted four years ago as a rising star in her party. Keep in mind, Michigan voters have elected two Democratic senators and backed Democrats for President in 2000 and 2004.

Indeed, the September news of massive layoffs by Ford has become far too common in Michigan. Unemployment stands at 7.1 percent, well above the national average. What’s bad for the state could be good for the campaign of Dick DeVos, the Republican. The name may sound familiar to evangelicals. His father, Rich DeVos, helped found Amway Corporation and bankrolled many evangelical schools and ministries.

The younger DeVos, past president of his father’s company, prefers to tout his family’s entrepreneurial spirit.

“DeVos has really stuck to that job-creation, change-the-economy message,” said the Acton Institute’s Jerry Zandstra. “It’s very, very rare for him to address social issues of any kind.”

Gov. Jennifer Granholm in 2003 vetoed a partial-birth abortion ban. The legislature overturned the veto in 2004. But earlier this year, she also signed a bill that requires abortion providers to show abortion-seeking women an ultrasound image of their unborn child.

So you might expect evangelicals to spread their votes evenly between the two parties. Maybe, but according to Corwin Smidt, executive director of Calvin College’s Henry Institute, research indicates evangelicals have become more receptive to Republican economics.

“Whereas evangelicals were fairly united on social issues in the 1980s and early 1990s and much less unified on economic issues,” he explained, “evangelical voters took a much more unified stand on economic issues by the end of the millennium.”

Copyright © 2006 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Yesterday: Pennsylvania’s Senate race between Bob Casey Jr. and Sen. Rick Santorum

Tomorrow: South Dakota’s abortion ban.

Jennifer Granholm’s campaign website and Dick Devos’ official site have more information on the candidates.

The Detroit Free Press reports on the candidates’ strategies to get votes from women.

A Washington Post article examines DeVos’ campaign response to Michigan’s job loss.

While Intelligent Design has been a factor in the campaigns, the Kalamazoo Gazette reported that both candidates have avoided talking about religion.

Current poll results are posted at RealClearPolitics.com and other sites.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

News

Looking for God in Russia: Finding Jesus in Orthodox Robes and Evangelical Jeans

God's Word in an Old Light

The New Context of World Missions

Reviewed by Jim Reapsome

News

Long-Distance AIDS Ministry

Jim Thomas

Plethora of Talent

Rx for Recidivism

Interview by Rob Moll

Middle East Morass

Behold, the Global Church

Brenda Salter McNeil

Stopping Cultural Drift

Dreaming of Dystopia

Reviewed by John Wilson

Imagining a Different Way to Live

Ragan Sutterfield

A Good Death

'Mrs. Hunter's Happy Death' reviewed by Rob Moll

Editorial

Look at All the Lonely People

A Christianity Today Editorial

Into the Silent Land

Reviewed by Patricia Raybon

A Practical Understanding of Jesus' Life

Reviewed by Gary M. Burge

Shoot-First Apologetics

Richard J. Mouw

How God Works Through Ordinary Churches

Reviewed by Howard A. Snyder

Worth Protecting

Editorial

Theocracy, Anyone?

A Christianity Today Editorial

No Theocracy Here

Douglas LeBlanc reviews 'Believers'

Meet the Patriot Pastors

Nate Anderson

Autumn

Compiled by Richard A. Kauffman

News

Races to Watch: Tammy Duckworth vs. State Sen. Peter Roskam

Collin Hansen

Children of a Lesser Hope

Races to Watch: South Dakota's Abortion Ban

Collin Hansen

Q&A: Newt Gingrich

Margin of Victory

Collin Hansen with Tony Carnes

News

Passages

High-Impact Leader and Shaker

News

Quotation Marks

The Other <em>Plan B</em>

Reviewed by Lauren F. Winner

News

Morning-After Headache

Sheryl Henderson Blunt

News

Go Figure

Does Islam Need a Luther or a Pope?

Gallery of Accusations

Brad A. Greenberg

News

<em>Christianity Today</em> News Briefs

News

Cutting Out <em>VeggieTales</em>' Core

Bob Smietana

News

Malay Melee

Deann Alford

News

Public Grievance

Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra

Expelling InterVarsity

Sarah Pulliam

Clash of Churches in Lebanon

Peter Lamprecht, Compass Direct

View issue

Our Latest

Analysis

Republicans and Democrats Clash on Epstein File Release

The Bulletin with Nicole Martin

The newest documents remind Christians to support sexual abuse victims.

Evangelicals Confront a Revolutionary Age

A Catholic on the campaign trail and the “possibly catastrophic character of what is happening under our eyes” caused deep concern in 1960.

News

Hindu Nationalists Attack Missionaries in Northern India

One victim describes the mob descending on their bus, a rare occurrence in Muslim-majority Jammu and Kashmir.

News

Armenia Holds Inaugural Prayer Breakfast Amid Church Arrests

Some see the crackdown as persecution, others challenge the national church’s ties to Russia.

Review

A New Jesus Horror Movie Wallows In Affliction

Peter T. Chattaway

“The Carpenter’s Son,” starring Nicolas Cage, is disconnected from biblical hope.

News

Kenya Clergy Oppose Bill Aimed at Regulating Churches

Moses Wasamu

Pastors say the proposed law could harm religious freedoms.

The Bulletin

Israeli Settler Violence, Epstein Emails, and BrinGing Back Purity

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

West Bank skirmishes, Congress releases Epstein documents mentioning Trump, and Gen Z reconsiders purity culture.

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Christians from 45 Countries Call for Zion Church Pastor’s Release

Meanwhile in China, the house church continues to gather and baptize new believers.

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