Senator Mike Lee on His Mormonism
Senator Mike Lee, the junior senator from Utah, gave an interview for reason.comĀ in which he discussed the Tea Party faction of the Republican party, the struggles the Republican party is having in connecting with young voters and how his Mormon faith influences his world view.
Born in Mesa, AZ, Mike Lee later grew up in Provo, UT when his father, Rex E. Lee, became the founding dean of the J. Reuben Clark Law School. He spentĀ two years in VirginiaĀ during hisĀ childhood where he grew up next to several prominent politicians like Robert Byrd andĀ Strom Thurmond. Harry Reid, another prominent member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, served asĀ his family’s home teacher while they were in Virginia.
TheĀ interview withĀ Nick GillespieĀ is about 20 minutes long, but you can fast forward to 16:40 for Lee’sĀ comments on how his Mormonism shapes his policies andĀ his daily life. Below is a transcript of that part of the interview.
Beginning at 16:40
GILLESPIE: Does your faith inform your politics? Should voters care about a politicianĀ or a leaderās faith?
LEE: First of all, my faith informs everything I do. It certainly informs how I do my job,Ā how I treat my family, and how I interact with other so yes it informs everything I do.
GILLESPIE: What is the essence of your faith? Is it ādo unto others…ā
LEE: Itās following Jesus Christ, the redeemer of the world, the Son of God who tookĀ upon himself the sins of mankind and made it possible for us to receive forgiveness andĀ to be resurrected after this life. As to the second part of your question, there are manyĀ who share my faith, who donāt share my view of government. Iām certainly not willingĀ to assume as a voter that simply because someone else shares my faith that theyāreĀ going to get my vote. As a voter what I look for is whether somebody shares my viewĀ of government and its proper role. That person may or may not share my faith; thatĀ person may or may not have any faith. Iām hiring them not to be my minister. Iām hiringĀ them to represent me in government. I want to know what they think the proper role ofĀ government is. If theyāre running for federal office I want to know what they think theĀ proper role of the federal government is, how they read the constitution, whether they seeĀ this as some kind of open-ended conversation-starter or whether they view it as actuallyĀ meaningfully restricting the power of the federal government.
GILLESPIE: Faith in Congress, the Gallup poll just came out recently. Seven percent ofĀ people have a lot of confidence in Congress. Itās a historic low. Around the Reason officeĀ the question was like, āWho are those seven percent and have they been in a cave.ā So itĀ seems like thereās a lot of energy towards a libertarian or a conservative movement forĀ smaller government. How do we know that candidates and elected officials get it, thatĀ they are signing onto limited government, constitutional government, and responsibleĀ government?
LEE: I think most of the time we know whether they get it based on what they tell us.Ā The battle lines are becoming a little clearer every day when people are learning whatĀ a true limited government conservative looks like. What a true limited governmentĀ conservative is willing to say and identify as a bright-line rule.
GILLESPIE: Does that work? You famously primaryed a long time incumbent. AreĀ primarying candidates generally a good idea, even if the challenger doesnāt win? LikeĀ McDaniel versus Thad Cochran in Mississippi itās an analogous situation. Is that a placeĀ where the lines are kind of clearly drawn, where you have a guy who has been in powerĀ for a long time and always seems to be happy to go along, spend a lot of money, versus aĀ challenger. Is there a clear choice there for you on whom to back in that situation?
LEE: In order for the Republican party, or any political party for that matter, to be able toĀ lay any claim to being a party of principle, there needs to be a robust debate within thatĀ party. And for that to occur I think primary elections will always need to happen.