Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The ‘religious right’ may finally be losing its influence

- Perry Bacon Jr. Perry Bacon Jr. is a Washington Post columnist.

Former president Donald Trump’s struggle to find a position on abortion that appeases religious activists in his party without offending more moderate and secular voters is perhaps the clearest example of one of the most important tensions in American politics today: Religion is declining in America overall, but in some ways becoming an even more important force within the Republican Party. We have less religion but still very religiousl­y influenced politics.

With a growing number of Republican­s saying they aren’t Christian or religious, polls suggest many Republican voters who would prefer a GOP that wasn’t trying to make abortions impossible and ban books written by LGBTQ+ authors from public schools and libraries.

But those Republican­s aren’t organized into wellfunded activist groups working at the local, state and federal levels. And the portion of the party wary of the religious right overwhelmi­ngly falls in line and backs GOP candidates in general elections, even if those candidates have adopted the religious right’s agenda.

Creative and relentless

In contrast, the party’s religious bloc defends its priorities fiercely, and in moral terms. Groups such as the Family Research Council and the Alliance Defending Freedom are constantly pushing bills in state legislatur­es and filing lawsuits. They are creative and relentless in exploring methods to execute their agenda, such as their effort to get a future Republican president to invoke a once-obscure law from 1873 (the Comstock Act) to limit abortion.

Those on the religious right argue that abortion, same-sex marriage, people changing their gender identities and other actions condoned by liberals are violations of core religious tenets. So they aren’t willing to set aside those views just because they poll badly. It’s hard for nonreligio­us Republican­s to win intraparty arguments when the religious bloc is speaking with such passion.

So while America and even the Republican electorate is significan­tly less religious than in Ronald Reagan’s or George W. Bush’s heyday, the GOP is still dominated by the same two groups that have controlled it for decades: wealthy individual­s and businesses who donate millions to conservati­ve organizati­ons and Republican campaigns because they want to keep taxes low and regulation­s limited; and religious groups that want to keep American culture conservati­ve.

Of course, the religious right has changed over time. Though the term “evangelica­l” once described religious conservati­ves of prior eras, it was more precisely a movement led by white, male Southern Baptist leaders and activists. Today’s religious right has a bigger role for Catholics, women and people of color, as well as Protestant­s who aren’t Southern Baptists, including Pentecosta­ls and those from America’s growing ranks of nondenomin­ational churches.

The Republican wings

This is why I use the term “religious right” rather than, say, “Christian nationalis­ts” or “evangelica­ls.” There are many Christians who argue that the religious right’s stances are a perversion of the faith. The exact meanings of “Christian nationalis­m” and “evangelica­lism” are contested, but everyone agrees there is a bloc on the right that claims to be acting out of religious beliefs.

Neverthele­ss, winning Republican primaries still requires courting both the party’s business and religious wings. The former provides money for a campaign; the other voters and local organizers.

These two groups have an informal détente. Wealthy conservati­ves who are more interested in keeping taxes low don’t trash the party’s religious conservati­ves for being focused on abortion and school vouchers. And the religious conservati­ves go along with tax cuts for the wealthy.

Trump is beholden to religious conservati­ves, too. The business wing of the party tried to break with him after the 2020 election and the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, spending much of the past three years trying to elevate other potential Republican presidenti­al nominees, particular­ly Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. But Trump’s strong support among religious voters helped him easily win the Republican primaries this year.

For the general election, Trump’s attempts to distance himself from recent antiaborti­on rulings from conservati­ve judges in Arizona and Florida show he understand­s the problem: The religious right’s agenda might be unacceptab­le to the rest of the country.

Nothing in particular moderates

It’s not that America is hostile to religion. Seventy-four percent of Americans are affiliated with a faith. (Sixty-seven percent are Christians.) And while atheists and agnostics tend to be very liberal and antireligi­on, the biggest bloc of nonbelieve­rs is people who describe their religious views as “nothing in particular.”

This bloc tends to have more moderate views politicall­y and regard religion more with ambivalenc­e than repugnance. It’s likely many swing voters are “nothing in particular” or nominally Christians. So they wouldn’t be turned off by a religious candidate but would oppose someone pushing policies hostile to women, LGBTQ+ Americans and non- Christians.

That means this year’s elections could hinge on whether Trump and other Republican candidates can remain deeply tied to the religious right without offending too many of everyone else.

America might not yet be ready for a presidenti­al candidate who is openly not religious, but it might no longer tolerate a candidate who promises to do the bidding of the religious right.

 ?? Lynne Sladky/Associated Press ?? Conservati­ve religious leaders pray with Donald Trump during a rally in 2020.
Lynne Sladky/Associated Press Conservati­ve religious leaders pray with Donald Trump during a rally in 2020.

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