Politics | Tea Party Religious Right Worried About Tea Party Movement They fear anti-tax crowd is too secular By Kevin Spak Posted Mar 12, 2010 11:00 AM CST Copied Tea party supporters demonstrate before the arrival of President Barack Obama at the Renaissance Grand Hotel, Wednesday, March 10, 2010, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Jeff Curry) Religious conservatives are glancing nervously at the tea party movement, afraid the cool new kids at the GOP lunch table don’t care about their issues. It seems the movement “has a politics that’s irreligious,” evangelical leader Richard Cizik tells Politico. “I can’t see how some of my fellow conservatives identify with it.” The movement centers around economic issues, and organizers have largely avoided social ones. “People didn’t come out into the streets to protest gay marriage or abortion,” counters an official from the libertarian-leaning tea party group FreedomWorks. For activists those issues are divisive distractions; for Evangelicals they’re all-important. Many religious conservatives also disapprove of the movement’s harsh invective against Barack Obama, whose personal conduct they approve of. “Younger Evangelicals are largely turned off by the tea party movement,” says Cizik, “by the incivility, the name-calling, the pathos of politics.” Read These Next Melinda French Gates reacts to her ex showing up in new Epstein files. Sarah Ferguson said she cut off Epstein. Not quite, emails show. The voice behind 'Joy to the World' has died at 83. Turning Point reveals lineup for its alternative halftime show. Report an error