I'm an avid Romney hater, but not because I think he's done anything that would lead me to believe he's not a good Mo'. I am not a huge Reid fan either, but again, I've never read or seen anything that makes me cringe as a Mormon. People like Me, BeanTool and Craig1221 are the real problems with the perception of Mormonism.
This sort of personal honesty deserves an actual relevant response. Mormons, in my experience and judgment, are mostly of a "missionary mindset" where we look at people pretty kindly or charitably as we associate with them in the faith. It is true that Romney and maybe even Reid carry no known or probable personal baggage in terms of personal moral problems like being alcoholic, afflicted with drug dependencies, or surplus sexual experimentation/addiction, and hence Trout can make an actually valid statement that they are apparently pretty good Mormons.
I listen to FM 95.5 as my favorite radio fare, which is the "Bible Broadcast Network", a huge born-again Christian outreach from North Carolina, and they carry the Pacific Garden Mission's very long-standing classic missionary program "Unshackled", which is basically a running documentary on personal salvation experiences of people whose lives were so hopelessly broken by alcohol, criminal, abusive, and other serious personal addictions you'd imagine there was no possible hope for a change, until they came to Jesus and gave their souls to Him, saying "Come into my life Lord Jesus", with pretty positive subsequent victory in Jesus.
However, the emphasis is slightly different between Mormons and these kinds of Christians on certain issues. Christians of that sort will accept others' personal failings in the past when there's been such a confession, and count them as true christians. Mormons in some respects will "keep score", perhaps silently and with kindly smiles on their faces, while not fully trusting people to have actually changed. Thus a Mormon who has changed will go on carrying in his own opinion, and with substantial undercurrents of the same judgment in family and friends, a realization that they are not good examples and feel that people like them are not good examples of Mormonism. Well, if the basic tenet of Christianity is that faith can help us, we Mormons ought to have a program like "Unshackled" running to show how repentance saves us humans from sins, and maybe we'd believe it more.
Folks like Newt Gingrich, on the other hand, can almost pass muster as real Christians, by simple rhetorical assertions. But I was actually amazed that the southern christian vote went pretty hard against Gingrich in the press of this election campaign, because his continued association with politically important affiliations like the insiders of the Council on Foreign Relations, and his record of deal-making with the honchos were still being "kept score" in christian conservative minds, despite his claims to have finally seen the light in his personal life and his belief that conservative principles can bring our nation back.
So here's how the Gingrich campaign is openly acknowledging how the GOP elites have been attempting to give us another loser in Romney":
https://www.timetochoose.com/
The Republican Party is at a crossroads.
There's a battle going on between the establishment minority, and the conservative majority.
Between the GOP establishment that cares only about its own power. And the conservative majority that wants power returned to the people.
The establishment minority wants us to hold our noses and vote for the Massachusetts moderate. They tell us he is the best man to beat PresidentObama. They tell us he is the best we can do.
We've been down this road before.
• In 1976, they gave us Gerald Ford. We got Jimmy Carter.
• In 1996, they gave us Bob Dole. We got Bill Clinton.
• In 2008, they gave us John McCain. We got Barak Obama.
Now they're trying sell us Mitt Romney.Don't let them. Not this time.
The establishment does not believe what we believe.
They do not see the threats to our freedom, our Constitution and the America we hold dear. They only see a threat to their power. They think they control the Republican Party. But they have a problem.
There are more of us then there are of them.
We the conservative majority can take our party - AND our country - back. We can return the GOP back to it's core principles. And it's proud heritage.
This from the one candidate with substantial real experience working with the GOP establishment as a real mover and shaker on their own terms. Newt is an incredibly smart person, and pragmatic to beat the band. I find his ideas pretty compelling and realistic, and I think he is probably actually the best man we could put in office----if he actually believes what he says. He would be personally strong enough to actually make a difference for our country. And the fact is, he did some pretty good things when he was the house majority leader in the Clinton years, and has the personal record for doing a lot of good things he actually believes.
But I think the first realization we have to look for in our next President is in the line of personal repentance from being hooded by the honchos. We have just got to say elitism is wrong, and that this country belongs to the people. Newt doesn't quite convince me he's changed that much.
So it's only Ron Paul who has the consistent record on constitutional issues.