Why I’m Glad Jimmy Carter Was the First President I Voted For

How faith shaped his life and public service

We always remember our first experiences. My first experience to cast a ballot for the president of the United States was in 1976. James Earl “Jimmy” Carter Jr. — an engineer,  a former naval officer, a humble peanut farmer, and a “born-again” Christian — was a welcome candidate after the disgraceful fall and resignation of President Richard M. Nixon for the lying and cover-up of the Watergate scandal.

Gerald R. Ford, who pardoned Nixon, became president, the only person to hold that office who was neither elected for presidency nor vice presidency. Carter got my vote when he told the American people, “I’ll never tell a lie. I’ll never make a misleading statement. I’ll never betray the confidence that any of you had in me.”

Jimmy the Baptist

Carter grew up as a Southern Baptist and was the first U. S. president to announce unabashedly he was a “born again” Christian. He proselytized his ideas with folk singer Bob Dylan and also with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in brokering the peace that became known as the Camp David Accords in 1978.

In 1976, Carter owed his presidential victory to White evangelical Christian voters. They lauded Carter because he didn’t play down but lived out loud his personal meaning of being a born-again Christian entering  American politics.

During his presidential run, Carter unapologetically told The New York Times,  “If there are those who don’t want to vote for me because I’m a deeply committed Christian, I believe they should vote for someone else.”

Carter taught Sunday school for decades, and Carter’s  favorite Bible verse was from Micah 6:8. “Do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with God.” He lived by it!

Carter upheld the traditional Baptist total separation of church and state. He opposed public money and tax exemptions for religious schools and institutions. He discontinued the tradition of inviting evangelicals to conduct White House prayer services, a once-cozy niche for prominent evangelicals such as Rev. Billy Graham, who he admired.

However, if Jimmy Carter were running for president today, they would consider him a heretic and excommunicate him for his stances on Christian nationalism, white supremacy, reproductive justice, LGBTQ+ rights, Palestine, and interpretation of scripture, among others.

Son of a segregationist

Carter, a Georgian like many of the civil rights leaders of the era, wasn’t involved in the 1960s civil Rights Movement and never confronted his father’s pro-Confederate views nor his denomination’s support of slavery, nor did he meet with Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

According to Bill Barrow of the Associated Press, “For Carter, it marked the evolution of a white politician from the Old Confederacy: As a local leader and state senator who aspired for more, he had mostly avoided controversial stands during the civil rights era. During all their years in Atlanta, he never met the movement’s leader.”

“Carter never did anything racist himself. But he didn’t participate,” biographer Jonathan Alter said. “And King was right there.”

However, to the shock of his white evangelical base and the awe of Black voters, Carter at his inauguration issued an edict: “The time for racial discrimination is over.”

Carter appointed the first Black woman to serve in a presidential Cabinet and the first Black, Andrew Young, an icon of the Civil Rights Movement, as the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. He also formed a relationship with King’s family.

Jimmy the LGBTQ+ ally

During Carter’s administration, he was concerned about LGBTQ+ issues such as employment discrimination. After his presidency, he advocated abolishing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

As an honest man, Carter was candid about his struggle with marriage equality. But he leaned into his faith to guide him. In 2005, an Advocate reporter asked him why he had no problem with gays and lesbians like many Christians. “I’m a worshipper of Jesus Christ, who never mentioned homosexuals in any way — certainly not in a deleterious fashion,” Carter replied.

In 2015, when the Supreme Court’s Obergefell v. Hodges decision legalized same-sex marriage in all 50 states, Carter publicly gave a shoutout of approval.

“I think Jesus would encourage any love affair if it was honest and sincere and was not damaging to anyone else,” he told HuffPost Live. “I believe Jesus would approve of gay marriage.”

He walked the talk

Faith was foundational to Carter’s politics. However, his faith-driven public service bloomed after his presidency; he became the quintessential statesman and the nation’s greatest ex-president.  Like many Americans, I hold Carter in high regard. I liked his calm demeanor and balanced approach in difficult conversations and heated debates. He was not an alarmist but a measured man, thoughtful in his actions and responses. I admired the type of man he was as he walked in the world.

I’m glad President Jimmy Carter was my first.

May he rest in peace.