Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Survey: White evangelica­ls backed Trump

President, Biden split Catholic vote, AP VoteCast says

- By Elana Schor and David Crary

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump won support from about 8 in 10 white evangelica­l Christian voters in his race for reelection, but Catholic voters split almost evenly between him and Democratic opponent Joe Biden, a lifelong member of the faith, according to AP VoteCast.

Trump’s hold on white evangelica­l voters illustrate­s the GOP’s enduring success with a bloc of religious conservati­ves who have been a linchpin of the president’s political base since his 2016 victory.

AP VoteCast showed 50% of Catholics backing Trump and 49% favoring Biden, reflecting the faith’s longstandi­ng role as a closely contested vote in presidenti­al elections — particular­ly in Rust Belt battlegrou­nd states such as Michigan and Wisconsin. Trump won both of those statesbyle­ssthan1 percentage point in 2016, but Biden prevailed in both this year.

The survey of more than 110,000 voters nationwide was conducted for The Associated Press by NORC at theUnivers­ity of Chicago.

Aheadof the election, the rival campaigns targeted Catholics with fervent appeals to vote based on their faith. Trump supporters said faithful Catholics should not vote for Biden because of his support for abortion rights, while Biden backers said Trump is too divisivean­dhas failed to elevate social justice issues that are part of Catholic teaching.

Michael Wear, a past faith adviser to former President Barack Obama, said he saw signs that the Biden campaign’s focused outreach to religious voters had paid off.

Biden, the presumptiv­e president-elect, would be just the second Catholic

president after John F. Kennedy.

“Biden’s political approach has been vindicated in these results,” saidWear, who helped lead a bipartisan super PAC this fall that aimed to undercut Trump’s Christian support. “He ran because he believed he would not lose the Rust Belt, when the nominee in 2016 did.”

Michael New, an abortion opponent who teaches social research at Catholic University of America, said Trump’s opposition to abortion likely attracted some Catholic voters even if they disagreed with him on other issues.

This year, Catholic voters accounted for 22% of the electorate, and there was a sharp rift within their ranks by race and ethnicity.

Among white Catholics, 57% backed Trump and 42% backed Biden, accord

ing to VoteCast. In 2016, Trump won 64% of white Catholics and Clinton won 31%, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of voters.

Among Hispanic Catholics, VoteCast shows 67% backed Biden and 32% backed Trump.

“The election results show that the Catholic Church is as divided as our nation, but the real divide is race and ethnicity, not theology,” said David Gibson, director of Fordham University’s Center on Religion and Culture.

He said the gap between the white Catholic vote for Trump and the Latino vote for Biden poses a challenge for church leaders, especially if the Republican Party continues to woo white voters with anti-immigrant rhetoric.

“If the Republican Party continues to try to amplify

calls to white grievance and fear of immigrants in order to rally the white Catholic vote, that could create further problems for the Catholic Church itself as it seeks unity,” Gibson said via email.

Catholics weren’t the only religious group vocally courted by the Biden campaign, which also sought to cut into Trump’s advantage with certain segments of the white evangelica­l electorate. Yet the president’s commanding performanc­e with that bloc raises questions about whether future Democratic campaigns would make similar efforts.

Ryan Burge, a political scientist at Eastern Illinois University who focuses on religious voting patterns, said white evangelica­ls “are as red as red can get” and suggested that future Democratic hopefuls pay

more attention to white Catholics and Hispanic evangelica­ls.

“There’s no way to peel anybody off, because there’s no wedge there” among white evangelica­ls who favor the Republican agenda, Burge said.

Among voters with no religious affiliatio­n, Biden took 72% whileTrump­took 26%. And VoteCast found several other religious voting blocs going overwhelmi­ngly for Biden, largely in line with their previous preference for Democrats.

Jewish voters made up 3% of the electorate and went overwhelmi­ngly for Biden, with 68% backing the Democrat compared with 31% backing Trump. AmongMusli­m voters, 64% supported Biden and 35% supported Trump. In a 2017 survey from Pew Research Center, about two-thirds of U.S. Muslims identified as

Democratic or leaned to the Democratic Party.

One bright spot for Trumpamong­religious voters was his performanc­e among The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints members. In 2016, Trump won the state of Utah — with its sizable population of church members — with less than 50% support as third-party candidate Evan McMullin, a church member himself, won more than 20% of the vote.

While 67% of members of the faith voted forRepubli­cans in the 2018 midterms, according to VoteCast, only 56% said then that they approved of Trump’s handling of his job.

But this year, with no third-party candidate on the ballot, Trump got the backing of 71% of Latterday Saints nationwide, while 24% supported Biden.

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY/AP ?? A voter waits at the Cathedral of Praise in Nashville, Tenn. President Trump won white evangelica­ls, AP VoteCast says.
MARK HUMPHREY/AP A voter waits at the Cathedral of Praise in Nashville, Tenn. President Trump won white evangelica­ls, AP VoteCast says.

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