Las Vegas Review-Journal

MAGA crowd not worried about evangelica­l unrest

The number of church-going Republican­s continues to decline

- CLARENCE PAGE COMMENTARY Contact Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotri­bune.com.

BLACK voters have traditiona­lly been pivotal to the fortunes of the Democratic Party, but some recent polls have suggested that they are proving less bankable for President Joe Biden than in the past. Whether or not as many as 20 percent of Black voters have in fact deserted the

Democrats, as some recent polls suggest, is a contested matter. But it’s probably fair to say that Democrats currently are in more of a defensive than a growth mode with that portion of the electorate.

But what of Donald Trump and evangelica­ls? Does the same apply?

Historical­ly, what we used to know as the evangelica­l bloc has meant a lot to the GOP base, much like Black voters have been crucial to the Democratic base.

But both of these truisms are looking less reliable this time around as we see church-going declining in America and more factions developing within a previously homogenous bloc. Abortion politics comes into play here, too, and Trump’s stance on the issue not only has been near impossible to pin down but also has appeared to many evangelica­ls to be a matter of political expediency, not sincere moral conviction.

That said, it’s also true that the idea of a single evangelica­l point of view is looking increasing­ly dated as cultural and political earthquake­s have erupted inside the church just as they have within our current presidenti­al race. Clearly, some of former President Trump’s statements in recent months have driven a wedge between his campaign and religious voters, particular­ly those all-important evangelica­ls. In April, for example, he said he believed abortion should be regulated at the state level, with very little interferen­ce from the federal government. His statements were met with strong backlash from the very same anti-abortion rights groups that had celebrated his appointmen­t of the Supreme Court justices who helped write the landmark decision to overturn the Roe v. Wade ruling.

Trump’s head-spinning logic was impossible to follow. He took credit for the decision the three Trump-appointed justices helped make, but he then appeared to turn against its consequenc­es, saying the states should make their own decisions about regulating abortion.

Trump’s new position infuriated the Susan B. Anthony Pro-life America organizati­on, which favors a federal ban on abortion nationwide and condemned Trump’s comments as a “morally indefensib­le position for a self-proclaimed pro-life presidenti­al candidate.” That should hardly have come as a surprise.

The issue now for Republican­s, and Trump, is whether it will matter. And there’s a growing sense within Trump’s presidenti­al campaign that he actually can afford some erosion of the traditiona­l Republican support coming from evangelica­ls. That’s because Trump’s most impactful base of support in the 2016 primary contest came from a rising group in the GOP whose impact has been largely unnoticed: Republican­s who are thoroughly disinteres­ted in churches, synagogues or other places of worship.

Ryan Burge, an associate professor of political science at Eastern Illinois University and the research director for Faith Counts, has authored several books on church attendance including “The Nones: Where They Came From, Who They Are, and Where They Are Going.”

“Nones” is Burge’s label for the “non-affiliated” or “none-churchgoer­s.” No religious affiliatio­n has morphed from 5 percent of the population to nearly 30 percent over the past half-century, according to Pew Research Center.

“The data show that the former president’s support among this low-attender group is growing, which means that in the short term, even if Trump does alienate some religiousl­y devout members of the religious right,” Burge wrote in Politico last fall, “he remains well positioned to secure the nomination.”

That came true, and, from there, the evidence of continuanc­e is compelling. Take this statistic from Burge’s article: “In 2016, 39 percent of all Republican voters attended church less than once a year. In comparison, just 36 percent said that they attended religious services at least once a week.”

It’s reasonable to assume that in 2024, the number of church-going Republican­s has declined even further. Significan­tly so. And thus, they matter less to the ever-expedient Trump’s campaign for president.

Dozens of books and other media have been produced to try to explain the unexpected bond between white evangelica­l Christians and Trump’s populist MAGA movement. Or so everyone has been thinking.

But it might well be that they are missing the bigger point.

There simply are fewer Republican evangelica­ls these days, and the MAGA crowd now is better able to get along just fine without them.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? Evangelica­l Christians matter less and less to Donald Trump’s 2024 presidenti­al campaign.
The Associated Press file Evangelica­l Christians matter less and less to Donald Trump’s 2024 presidenti­al campaign.
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