Allen Whitt considers himself a true “movement
conservative” and often leads political battles in his state,
championing social issues and conservative values. But in West
Virginia’s presidential primary Tuesday, Whitt, president of the Family
Policy Council of West Virginia, cast his ballot for a candidate no
longer running, and he’s not yet sure whether he’ll vote at all in the
November general election.
While Trump is now the only Republican left
running for president, socially conservative white evangelical voters
like Whitt are divided on how to handle their party’s presumptive
nominee. Throughout the primary season, Trump has gotten support from
rank-and-file evangelical voters, but many of the country’s prominent
evangelicals and those who are the most devout see Trump as antithetical
to everything they stand for. As they threaten to withhold support from
Trump, the evangelical movement, which is typically a crucial voting
bloc for Republicans, is weighing a choice between abandoning their
party or their strong religious beliefs on social issues.
Primary contests in West Virginia and Nebraska
on Tuesday proved the first test for how these voters might act with
Trump as their presumptive nominee. While the New York real estate
magnate easily won both states, both Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov.
John Kasich still had their names on the ballots, and each received
portions of the vote, particularly in Nebraska.
Whitt said his vote for Cruz in West Virginia
on Tuesday wasn’t just symbolic but rather aimed at electing delegates
who would share his values going into the Republican National Convention
this summer.
“We set out yesterday telling everybody to
support Ted Cruz. For those of us that are constitutionalists, which is
why you would support Cruz, we’re very concerned about Donald Trump’s
positions,” Whitt said Tuesday, citing Trump’s refusal to completely
disavow Planned Parenthood and his openness to allowing transgender
people to use the bathroom of their choice as prime examples of the
candidate’s liberal values.
Among white evangelical Protestants, Cruz won 10 percent support against Trump's 77 percent in West Virginia, and in Nebraska,
Cruz got the vote of 26 percent of white evangelicals as opposed to
Trump's 57 percent. In both states, a majority of the electorate
identified as born-again or evangelical Christian, and a majority or
plurality were white evangelicals. Nebraska and West Virginia are both
fairly religious states — nearly 19 percent of people in Nebraska are
evangelical Protestants, according to data from Pew Research Center, and about 30 percent are evangelical Protestants in West Virginia.
“Support for Trump in West Virginia is very
strong, largely because of economic reasons, even though it’s a very
religious state,” said Erin Cassese, an associate professor of political
science at West Virginia University. “There’s a lot of opposition
toward the federal government, coupled with really, really negative
economic indicators. Evangelical support for Trump in West Virginia is
still going to be high. But that kind of confluence of poverty, low
levels of educational attainment and a high white population is not
necessarily present elsewhere.”
When looking at Cruz's remaining support among
evangelicals, Tuesday's results echo what happened in Indiana’s
Republican primary last week. While Trump won the white evangelical vote
there, just as he did with most demographics, exit polls showed
him leading Cruz among those voters by just 4 percentage points, which
was a much narrower lead than among other groups. Among Republican
primary voters who said they attend religious services once a week, the
race was similarly close, and Cruz actually dominated among those who
attend religious services more than once a week, capturing 61 percent of
those voters, compared with 33 percent who went for Trump. The outcomes
in Indiana clearly weren’t enough to keep Cruz in the race, but they do
show evangelical voters expressing a reticence similar to that of their
leaders.
A Southern Baptist, Cruz was a natural fit for
evangelicals with his fiery far-right conservatism and frequent
speeches about his faith on the campaign trail. The Texas senator
opposes abortion even in cases of rape or incest and believes same-sex
marriage and transgender rights are causing a “time of crisis” in
America. In contrast, Trump’s positions on abortion and same-sex
marriage are variously muddled and have changed over time, so
that even though he says he is now “pro-life” and against same-sex
marriage, many conservatives don’t trust these are Trump’s true beliefs.
The New York billionaire identifies as a Presbyterian, but his tendency
to stumble over Scripture and talk about money, deals and sex has added to the perception among some that he is not a real Christian.
Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton is
predominantly rejected by conservative evangelicals as well, as she
vigorously supports women's access to safe, legal abortions and
celebrates same-sex marriage and the gay community. Clinton has talked
about her Methodist faith while on the campaign trail and has begun
reaching out to Republicans who are turned off by Trump, but few
evangelicals expect these overtures to work.
Over the past week, many prominent Republicans have said
they are not ready to support Trump, and a number have stated they will
not vote for either Trump or Clinton in 2016, effectively sitting out
the election. Whitt said the Family Policy Council of West Virginia and
the many other groups like it in states around the country are
considering similar stances.
“Everyone has basically agreed to right now
bite our tongues, not make any declarations about whether we’ll stick
with the Never Trump hashtag or if a deal can be cut so that a socially
conservative knight can be brought in as a VP candidate,” Whitt said.
Bob Vander Plaats, who served as Cruz’s national co-chairman and is a leader in the evangelical movement, told Politico this week Trump
needs to prove he’s committed to the conservative cause and that a vice
presidential pick could be an important signal. But it’s unclear who
Trump could choose as his running mate who would convince evangelical
voters to take him seriously. Many Republicans lawmakers have already said they are not interested, and Trump’s combative style has left him with few friends among his former rivals.
Even if Trump could convince someone as
conservative as Cruz to join him on the GOP ticket, evangelical voters
might not believe Trump would listen to his running mate or stick to any
promises he made. Trump has changed policy positions many times over
the course of the 2016 primary season, and Republicans — including Cruz —
have often accused him of not being a true conservative.
White evangelical voters made up 54 percent of the electorate in Indiana, and on Tuesday they constituted 44 percent in Nebraska and 66 percent in
West Virginia. In general elections, evangelicals hold sway as well. In
the 2008 and 2012 general elections, exit polling showed evangelicals
made up 23 percent of all voters, and in 2004 they made up 21 percent.
In all of those elections, evangelicals skewed heavily Republican. So if
a significant number of evangelicals do decide to sit out the general
election, it could be bad news for Trump — and the GOP.
There is precedent for this kind of talk.
Though evangelicals have been a strong and enthusiastic group for
Republicans since their emergence as a significant voting bloc in the
1970s, the 2012 primary raised some concerns when Mitt Romney, a Mormon,
became the GOP nominee.
Evangelicals are not at all comfortable with
Mormonism, said Greg Smith, deputy director of the religion research
team at Pew Research. Smith said he sees a strong parallel between the
way evangelical voters discussed Romney during that presidential primary
and the way they’ve worried about Trump this year.
“When we were in the run-up to the 2012
election, during the primary we could see in our data that there were
lots of people in the Republican Party, and perhaps among evangelicals
in the Republican Party, who had reservations about Romney and about his
Mormonism,” Smith said. “But if it came down to Romney, a Mormon, and
Obama, a Democrat, the choice was going to be clear for evangelicals.
They showed up for Romney as strongly as for [George W.] Bush in 2004
and perhaps even more strongly than [Sen. John] McCain in 2008.”
Trump’s liberal values and purported sexual
dalliances are very different than Romney’s faith. But whether
evangelical Republicans stay home or ultimately hold their noses and
line up behind Trump, the 2016 election is likely to have more
far-reaching effects than that of 2012.
“The religious right is to the Republican
Party what labor unions once were to the Democratic Party: the most
reliable and energetic of coalitions,” said Randall Balmer, a leading
scholar in the history of American religion and a professor of religion
at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. “The Republican Party has become
less interested in religious voters, beginning with the rise of the Tea
Party … and that has led to this.”
Balmer added that while some evangelical
voters might sit out the election, he sees a larger impact on how
evangelicals will engage with the Republican Party going forward.
Conservatives have simply become more interested in fiscal issues
instead of voting only according to a candidate's views on abortion and
gay marriage rights. The fact that Trump has the support of any number
of evangelicals is “a measure of how thoroughly their politicization
with the rise of the religious right in the 1970s has produced a mutant
form of evangelicalism,” he said.
Whitt, of the Family Policy Council of West
Virginia, put the situation more bluntly: “Donald Trump could be the
friendly fire that rolls a grenade into the tent of the Republican Party
and blows it up forever.”
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