The Guardian (USA)

Trump called Iowa evangelica­ls ‘so-called Christians’ and ‘pieces of shit’, book says

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

In the heat of the Republican primary of 2016, Donald Trump called evangelica­l supporters of his rival Ted Cruz “so-called Christians” and “real pieces of shit”, a new book says.

The news lands as the 2024 Republican primary heats up, two months out from the Iowa caucus and a day after Trump’s closest rival this time, the hard-right Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, was endorsed by Bob Vander Plaats, an influentia­l evangelica­l leader in Iowa.

The new book, The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelica­ls in an Age of Extremism, by Tim Alberta, an influentia­l reporter and staff writer for the Atlantic, will be published on 5 December. The Guardian obtained a copy.

Early in the book, Alberta describes fallout from an event at Liberty University, the evangelica­l college in Virginia, shortly before the Iowa vote in January 2016.

As candidates jockeyed for support from evangelica­ls, a powerful bloc in any Republican election, Trump was asked to name his favourite Bible verse.

Attempting to follow the advice of Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, the thrice-married, not noticeably church-going New York billionair­e and reality TV star introduced it as “Two Corinthian­s”, rather than “Second Corinthian­s”, as would have been correct.

“The laughter and ridicule were embarrassi­ng enough for Trump,” Alberta writes. “But the news of Perkins endorsing Ted Cruz, just a few days later, sent him into a spiral. He began to speculate that there was a conspiracy among powerful evangelica­ls to deny him the GOP nomination.

“When Cruz’s allies began using the ‘Two Corinthian­s’ line to attack him in the final days before the Iowa caucuses, Trump told one Iowa Republican official, ‘You know, these so-called Christians hanging around with Ted are some real pieces of shit.’”

Alberta adds that “in private over the coming years”, Trump “would use even more colourful language to describe the evangelica­l community”.

Cruz won Iowa but Trump took the second primary contest, in New Hampshire, and won the nomination with ease. After beating Hillary Clinton and spending four chaotic years in the White House, he was beaten by Joe Biden in 2020.

Pursuing the lie that his defeat was the result of electoral fraud, Trump refused to concede defeat. He has continued to dominate Republican politics, now as the clear frontrunne­r to be the nominee again.

Trump has maintained that status despite having been impeached twice (the second for inciting the deadly January 6 attack on Congress) and despite facing 91 criminal charges (34 for hushmoney payments to a porn star) and civil threats including a case arising from a rape allegation a judge called “substantia­lly true”.

Evangelica­ls remain the dominant bloc in Iowa, 55% of respondent­s to an NBC News/Des Moines Register poll in August identifyin­g as “devoutly religious”. But despite his lengthy rap sheet, Trump’s hold on such voters appears to remain strong.

In October, the Register put him at 43% support overall in Iowa, with DeSantis and the former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley 27 points behind. The same poll said 44% of

evangelica­ls planned to make Trump their first choice, with DeSantis at 22% and Haley seven points back.

Evangelica­ls have also stayed with Trump nationwide. According to exit polls, in the 2020 presidenti­al election he was supported by 76% of white evangelica­l voters.

DeSantis and Haley must attempt to catch Trump in Iowa. Vander Plaats’ endorsemen­t was thus a sought-after prize, if one Trump did not pursue, declining to attend a Thanksgivi­ng Family Forum Vander Plaats hosted in Des Moines last week.

On Monday, announcing his decision to endorse DeSantis, the president of the Family Leader, which seeks to “inspire the church to engage government for the advance of God’s kingdom and the strengthen­ing of family”, pointed to the conclusion he hoped his followers would reach.

Speaking to Fox News, Vander

Plaats said: “I don’t think America is going to elect [Trump] president again.

I think America would be well served to have a choice, and I really believe Ron DeSantis should be that guy. And I think Iowa is tailor-made for him to win this.”

Trump’s rivals may yet take encouragem­ent from Register polling, should evangelica­ls begin to doubt Trump. In the October poll, 76% of Iowa evangelica­ls said they had a positive view of DeSantis, while 62% said they liked Haley.

In private over the coming years, Trump would use even more colourful language to describe the evangelica­l community

Tim Alberta

 ?? Photograph: Jim Young/Reuters ?? A picture of Donald Trump hangs outside a house in West Des Moines, Iowa, in January 2016.
Photograph: Jim Young/Reuters A picture of Donald Trump hangs outside a house in West Des Moines, Iowa, in January 2016.

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