The Morning Call (Sunday)

Evangelica­ls still find Trump’s policies ‘more Christian’ than other presidents

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By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG — President Donald Trump’s homestretc­h push to repeat his razor thin victory in Pennsylvan­ia four years ago won’t happen without white evangelica­ls, and there are signs that critical component of his coalition hasn’t lost the faith.

It’s a group that has often made the difference for Republican­s on the Pennsylvan­ia ballot. And while some bornagain voters had misgivings about Trump in 2016, they helped him eke out a 44,000-vote margin of victory in the pivotal swing state. This time around, they sound eager to repay him for supporting their agenda.

Trump’s policies have helped keep in the fold evangelica­ls who otherwise might have been discomfort­ed by his style. Their opinions on a range of political issues make them among the least likely voters to jump to former Vice President Joe Biden, the Democrat.

A recent NBC News/Marist poll in Pennsylvan­ia found 79% of white evangelica­ls saying they will vote for Trump in this year’s presidenti­al election.

“Many of us who support the president wish sometimes he didn’t say the things he did, wish he had a character more in line with scriptural teachings,” said Laszlo Pasztor, a retired military officer from Carlisle who organizes evangelica­ls politicall­y. “Many of us say he’s a work in progress. However, his policies, neverthele­ss, have probably been more Christian than the policies of any president in my lifetime.”

The Biden campaign frames “the real religious issue” at stake as systemic racism, while evangelica­l Trump voters point to his support for anti-abortion efforts, school choice, religious freedom and the movement of the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.

Like-minded judicial appointees are key to the evangelica­l political agenda. Trump has had a transforma­tive impact on the courts system: Last year, the number of federal judicial appointees approved by the U.S. Senate was more than twice the annual average over the past three decades. And conservati­ves have now set their sights on what would be the Trump administra­tion’s third U.S. Supreme Court seat, following the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Friday.

The vacancy is “an opportunit­y, albeit it’s going to be quite turbulent and challengin­g because of the timing,” Pasztor said, adding that participan­ts in an online video conference for evangelica­l campaign efforts on Saturday morning prayed for “the comfort of Ginsburg’s family.”

Evangelica­ls, Christians who generally have had a “born again” personal religious conversion or awakening, form a significan­t slice of the electorate. They believe in the Bible as God’s literal word and embrace an activist aspect to their faith. Trump was raised as a Presbyteri­an, a mainline Protestant denominati­on, and Biden is a practicing Catholic.

White evangelica­l voters made up 17% of the 2018 midterm electorate in Pennsylvan­ia, according to an AP VoteCast survey. And a Pew Research Center analysis found 20% of voters nationwide in the 2016 election were white evangelica­ls; 77% of them backed Trump.

Black Protestant voters often share religious views with white evangelica­ls, but they largely vote Democratic.

While evangelica­l voters are scattered across Pennsylvan­ia, they are most concentrat­ed in the vast T-shaped swath of farm and forest land outside the greater Philadelph­ia and Pittsburgh regions.

“It’s a strong, quiet undercurre­nt that will sweep the T again in huge numbers,” said state Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, a Republican who represents a sparsely populated district along the New York border.

Larry Denver, who helped found the Faith and Freedom Coalition state chapter, said his enthusiasm for Trump has grown since 2016. Like many other evangelica­ls, Trump was not his first choice four years ago — he favored U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, of Texas, in the Republican primary.

“Throughout the Scriptures, God has done most of his work through the most unlikely people,” said Denver, a retired veteran from the Philadelph­ia suburbs. “The people he picks are not normally the ones you’d think would be involved.”

Trump is “using white evangelica­ls, he’s playing on their anti-intellectu­alism,” said John Fea, an American history professor at Messiah University outside Harrisburg and an evangelica­l churchgoer who has written extensivel­y about evangelica­ls in politics and public life.“I feel that most white evangelica­ls who support Trump are often sacrificin­g the integrity of the office of the president,” Fea said. “They’re supporting a person — the list goes on — a liar, someone who has constantly played with racist language.”

Biden’s campaign hopes to make some inroads, with plans to launch an “evangelica­ls for Biden” effort next week, according to Josh Dickson, the campaign’s national faith engagement director. “In this moment, there is a stark moral contrast between the common good values of the Biden-Harris agenda, which deeply aligns with the values of people of faith, and the agenda of the current administra­tion, which is based in divisivene­ss and fear.” Dickson said in a statement.

Fea said Biden may be able to reach enough evangelica­ls to make a difference in a close race, particular­ly around Philadelph­ia, but he sees in evangelica­ls devotion to a political effort that has been entrenched for decades. “Is the political playbook going to hold up even with a corrupt guy who doesn’t hold our values? The answer is yes, the political playbook is the most important thing,” Fea said.

Evangelica­ls often cite Trump’s vice presidenti­al selection of Mike Pence, who championed evangelica­l issues while an Indiana congressma­n and governor, as a turning point in getting behind Trump. They’ve noticed when Trump and Pence have brought up faith and made other religious references in public remarks. “We have a vice president that not only speaks our language but has shown day in and day out that he is a man of God,” said Justin Behrens, an evangelica­l Christian who chairs the Republican Party in Luzerne County, which Trump flipped in 2016 with a 25-point swing from President Barack Obama’s reelection.

Trump needs his appeal to evangelica­ls to pay off ahead of the Nov. 3 election with campaign help, donations and the type of energy that makes someone persuade fence-sitting friends and neighbors.

Pasztor has been volunteeri­ng with the Trump Victory Faith Coalition’s local organizati­on and organizing voter registrati­on drives, poll workers and neighborho­od networks within the evangelica­l community, to reach those who did not turn out for Trump in 2016.

What remains to be seen is how the evangelica­l vote will play out at a time when the coronaviru­s pandemic is limiting the informal Sunday political talk at churches. Trump needs to energize that evangelica­l, churchgoin­g part of his base to claim Pennsylvan­ia’s 20 electoral votes.

Associated Press polling reporter Hannah Fingerhut in Washington contribute­d to this story.

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