Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Trump looks to boost evangelica­l support

- By Jonathan Lemire and Elana Schor

WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. >> In his first campaign move of the 2020 election year, President Donald Trump on Friday will visit a mega-church in Miami to highlight his support among evangelica­ls as he aims to shore up and expand support from an influentia­l piece of his political base.

The president will host the kickoff meeting of “Evangelica­ls for Trump” just days after he was the subject a scathing editorial in the Christiani­ty Today magazine that called for his removal from office. But Trump’s campaign believes that his record in office, including the installati­on of two Supreme Court justices, will cement the votes of religious conservati­ves this year.

“I think his record in the past three years is rock-solid in things that the faith community cares about him,” said Jentezen Franklin, a pastor to a megachurch in Georgia. “We used to see politician­s once every four years but this one is totally different in constantly reaching out to the faith community and we even get a chance to tell him when we disagree.”

Campaign officials said the Miami event was in the works well before the Christiani­ty Today op-ed which raised fresh questions about the durability of his support among the conservati­ve evangelica­ls who have proven to be a critical component of his political base.

The magazine’s editorial, written by editor-inchief Mark Galli, envisions a message to those evangelica­l Christians who have remained stalwart Trump backers “in spite of his blackened moral record.”

“Remember who you are and whom you serve,” Galli’s editorial states. “Consider how your justificat­ion of Mr. Trump influences your witness to your Lord and Savior. Consider what an unbelievin­g world will say if you continue to brush off Mr. Trump’s immoral words and behavior in the cause of political expediency.”

The piece, which comes in a magazine founded by the late Rev. Billy Graham, was denounced by Trump, who tweeted “No president has done more for the evangelica­l community.”

Graham’s son, Franklin Graham, a major Trump supporters, also criticized his father’s former magazine. But most political observers doubt it will cause many evangelica­ls to desert Trump, who received more than 80 percent of their vote in 2016.

Still, the campaign is taking few chances, citing the president’s support for Israel, installati­on of federal judges and prison reform as way to further jolt evangelica­l turnout that could help them secure wins in states like Michigan, Florida,

Pennsylvan­ia, North Carolina and Georgia.

More than 5,000 people are expected to attend the event at the El Rey Jesús church. The kickoff of “Evangelica­ls for Trump,” which will be followed in the weeks ahead by the launches of “Catholics for Trump”” and “Jewish Voices for Trump,” also comes days after Trump and his wife went to an evangelica­l Christmas Eve service in West Palm Beach rather than the liberal Episcopali­an church in which they were married and often attend holiday services.

Advisers believe that emphasizin­g religious issues may also provide inroads with Latino voters, who have largely steered clear of supporting the president. In particular, even a slight uptick with faith-focused Latinos could help Trump carry Florida and provide some needed breathing room in states like Texas.

“President Trump has appointed well over 180 solid, conservati­ve federal judges, including two exemplary Supreme Court justices. He has defended religious freedoms and has stood as the most pro-life president we’ve ever had,” said campaign press secretary Kayleigh McEnany. “Evangelica­ls for Trump will engage the Christian community nationwide to overwhelmi­ng re-elect President Trump in 2020.”

)The event comes just day after a new poll revealed that white evangelica­l Protestant­s stand noticeably apart from other religious people on how the government should act on two of the most politicall­y divisive issues at play in the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Asked about significan­t restrictio­ns on abortion -making it illegal except in cases of rape, incest or to threats to a mother’s life -- 37% of all Americans responded in support, according to the poll conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Those abortion limits drew 39% support from white mainline Protestant­s, 33% support from nonwhite Protestant­s and 45% support from Catholics, but 67% support from white evangelica­l Protestant­s.

A similar divide emerged over whether the government should bar discrimina­tion against people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgende­r in workplaces, housing or schools. About 6 in 10 Catholics, white mainline Protestant­s and nonwhite Protestant­s supported those protection­s, compared with about a third of white evangelica­l Protestant­s.

White evangelica­ls were also more likely than members of other faiths to say religion should have at least some influence on policymaki­ng.

Rev. Franklin Graham pointed to Trump’s record on abortion as a key driver of the president’s support from his religious community.

“I don’t think evangelica­ls are united on every position the president takes or says, but they do recognize he is the most pro-lifefriend­ly president in modern history,” Graham said in a recent interview. “He has appointed conservati­ve judges that will affect my children and grandchild­ren’s lives, long after he’s gone.”

But Democrats have shown strong interest in connecting with voters of faith, even evangelica­ls whom Trump is often assumed to have locked down. And some religious leaders believe people of faith may be turned off by Trump’s personal conduct or record.

“Friday’s rally is Trump’s desperate response to the realizatio­n that he is losing his primary voting bloc — faith voters. He knows he needs every last vote if he wants a shot at re-election, as losing just 5% of the faith voters ends his chances,” Pastor Doug Pagitt, the executive director of Vote Common Good. “In addition, he is trying to use this part of his base to give cover for his broken promises and immoral policies.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Pastor Joshua Nink, right, prays for then Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump, as his wife, Melania, left, watches after a Sunday service Jan. 31, 2016, at First Christian Church, in Council Bluffs, Iowa. In his first campaign move of the 2020electi­on year, President Donald Trump on Friday will launch a coalition of evangelica­ls as he aims to shore up and expand support from an influentia­l piece of his political base.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Pastor Joshua Nink, right, prays for then Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump, as his wife, Melania, left, watches after a Sunday service Jan. 31, 2016, at First Christian Church, in Council Bluffs, Iowa. In his first campaign move of the 2020electi­on year, President Donald Trump on Friday will launch a coalition of evangelica­ls as he aims to shore up and expand support from an influentia­l piece of his political base.

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