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2020 Faith Vote Reflects 2016 Patterns

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2020 Faith Vote Reflects 2016 Patterns



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Evangelical voters have shown strong support for President Trump over the last four years, and 8 in 10 voted for him in the 2020 election as well.





Samuel Corum/Getty Images



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Samuel Corum/Getty Images



National
For Trump, Conservative Catholics Are The New Evangelicals

The loss of white Catholic votes for Trump in the Upper Midwest may have been somewhat offset, however, by an apparent increase in Hispanic Catholic support for Trump in places like Florida.

A notable fact in 2016 was that exit polls showed about 80% of white evangelical Christians supported Trump in spite of his unfamiliarity with the Bible, his divorces, his vulgar rhetoric and his association with porn stars. Trump’s reputation in moral terms hasn’t changed all that much during his time in office, but there is little evidence of slippage among these faith voters.

Surveys of early voters and exit polls this year showed between 76 and 81% of white evangelical and «born again voters supporting Trump, according to the National Election Pool and AP/Votecast.

«We essentially have White evangelicals, somewhere around 8 in 10, supporting the president, standing by their candidate, standing by their man, says Jones.

Pundits and politicians are most interested in those voter groups who are up for grabs. From that point of view, white evangelical Christians may no longer warrant close attention.



Religion
In Pennsylvania, Catholic Voters Are Targeted By Both Sides

«I think the Democrats should stop thinking about white evangelicals entirely, Burge says. «And I think the Republicans should take them for granted. At some point, it’s like, what can you do to make them change — on the Democratic side or the Republican side?

Some of Biden’s supporters did try to reach evangelical Christians this year. Jerushah Duford, an evangelical writer and the granddaughter of Billy Graham, was a leader of the group, Pro-Life Evangelicals for Biden.

«I don’t know if it made a difference in the election results, but that’s not the only difference we were attempting to make, she says. «My goal was more about giving voice to those people who felt really uncomfortable watching evangelical leaders not saying anything and sometimes actually condoning what they were seeing in this administration.

«I think what these individuals needed was some faith leaders to come out and say, ‘I know you’re not hearing this everywhere, but this is not our faith,’ she says.

When the pro-Biden «Not Our Faith group was organized, Duford joined it. «My goal, she says, «was more of an encouragement to the droves of people who are leaving the church because of the hypocrisy they’ve seen.



Religion
American Christianity Must Reckon With Legacy Of White Supremacy, Author Says

The phenomenon of Americans leaving the faith traditions in which they were raised has been well documented in recent years. The share of the U.S. population and the electorate who list their religious affiliation as «none is growing steadily.

«I think the ‘God Gap’ is more and more the narrative when we think about the parties, Burge says. «Half of white liberals today identify as religiously unaffiliated, while the Right is staying very Christian.

The growth of the «nones, those with no religious affiliation, is especially notable among the youngest voter cohort, Generation Z, born after 1996.

«The Republicans have to figure out a way to peel off some of those more libertarian or fiscally conservative Generation Z ‘nones,’ Burge says, «or they’re going to have a very bleak future politically.

But in doing so, he warns, «They need to keep their white Christian base happy.
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