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Evangelical Christians rallying behind Donald Trump, poll finds | Evangelical Christians rallying behind Donald Trump, poll finds |
(about 1 month later) | |
Evangelical voters, long a key conservative voting bloc, are rallying behind Donald Trump, according to a survey that found 78% of rank-and-file white evangelicals say they plan on voting for the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. | Evangelical voters, long a key conservative voting bloc, are rallying behind Donald Trump, according to a survey that found 78% of rank-and-file white evangelicals say they plan on voting for the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. |
The survey, conducted by Pew Research Center from 15-25 June, found that support for Trump among white evangelicals tops even that of 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney, including more than one-third of the demographic that says they “strongly” support his candidacy. Presumptive Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, garnered the support of a mere 17% of white evangelical Protestants, but enjoyed the support of more than two-thirds of religiously unaffiliated registered voters: Clinton leads among voters who expressed no religious preference 67% to Trump’s 23%. | The survey, conducted by Pew Research Center from 15-25 June, found that support for Trump among white evangelicals tops even that of 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney, including more than one-third of the demographic that says they “strongly” support his candidacy. Presumptive Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, garnered the support of a mere 17% of white evangelical Protestants, but enjoyed the support of more than two-thirds of religiously unaffiliated registered voters: Clinton leads among voters who expressed no religious preference 67% to Trump’s 23%. |
Although white evangelicals have been a key Republican constituency since Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980, its demographic might is being challenged by the so-called “religions nones”, whose numbers swelled as younger Americans have aged into the electorate. Both groups make up roughly one-fifth of all registered voters in the US, with one-third of all Republican voters counting themselves as white evangelicals, and a quarter of Democratic voters being “religious nones”. | Although white evangelicals have been a key Republican constituency since Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980, its demographic might is being challenged by the so-called “religions nones”, whose numbers swelled as younger Americans have aged into the electorate. Both groups make up roughly one-fifth of all registered voters in the US, with one-third of all Republican voters counting themselves as white evangelicals, and a quarter of Democratic voters being “religious nones”. |
White evangelicals prefer Trump to Clinton on nearly every issue, according to the survey, ranking Trump as the candidate who would do a better job of dealing with gun policy (79%), defending against terrorist attacks (78%), dealing with immigration (75%) and selecting supreme court justices (74%). Only when asked which candidate would do the better job of fixing race relations in the US did white evangelicals say that Clinton would come out on top, 46% to Trump’s 44%. | White evangelicals prefer Trump to Clinton on nearly every issue, according to the survey, ranking Trump as the candidate who would do a better job of dealing with gun policy (79%), defending against terrorist attacks (78%), dealing with immigration (75%) and selecting supreme court justices (74%). Only when asked which candidate would do the better job of fixing race relations in the US did white evangelicals say that Clinton would come out on top, 46% to Trump’s 44%. |
The survey represents good news for Trump, whose policy history, including past embraces of abortion rights, same-sex marriage and religious tests to enter the US, and personal peccadilloes – three marriages and statements referring to avoiding sexually transmitted infections as his “own personal Vietnam” – turned off many evangelical leaders during the Republican primaries. | The survey represents good news for Trump, whose policy history, including past embraces of abortion rights, same-sex marriage and religious tests to enter the US, and personal peccadilloes – three marriages and statements referring to avoiding sexually transmitted infections as his “own personal Vietnam” – turned off many evangelical leaders during the Republican primaries. |
With the accession of Clinton, who is highly unpopular among white evangelicals, to the Democratic nomination, however, many appear to be holding their noses: 45% of white evangelical Protestants told Pew that their support for Trump is mainly a vote against Clinton, compared to 30% who said they are voting for Trump because they support him. | With the accession of Clinton, who is highly unpopular among white evangelicals, to the Democratic nomination, however, many appear to be holding their noses: 45% of white evangelical Protestants told Pew that their support for Trump is mainly a vote against Clinton, compared to 30% who said they are voting for Trump because they support him. |
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