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How Did Trump's Speech to Evangelicals Go on Tuesday? Not Great

How Did Trump's Speech to Evangelicals Go on Tuesday? Not Great

By Ruth Graham
THE SLATE
http://amp.slate.com/
June 22, 2016

While reporters dug into his paltry Federal Election Commission filing and Hillary attacked him from the stump, Donald Trump spoke to hundreds of Christian conservatives in New York on Tuesday, earning himself a standing ovation for a speech in which he promised to appoint anti-abortion Supreme Court justices, end the ban on churches politicking, and somehow force department store employees to say "Merry Christmas." "You talk about religious liberty and religious freedom, you don't have any religious freedom if you think about it," he said with his usual "Me Tarzan, you Jane" approach to policy subtleties.

Also on Tuesday, Trump named an executive board to advise him on evangelical issues as he enters the general election. The roster includes Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr.; former Christian Coalition leader Ralph Reed; former Southern Baptist Convention president Ronnie Floyd; former Focus on the Family president James Dobson; and about a dozen pastors. Former Minnesota congresswoman and presidential candidate Michele Bachmann is one of three women on the 26-person board.

Notice all those formers? The board is actually quite a ragtag bunch for a Republican in a general election--"a B-list of second-tier religious right figures along with a handful of peaked-long-ago relics," as blogger Fred Clark put it. And the irony of these Moral Majority types prostrating themselves before Trump was laid beautifully bare in a photo Falwell proudly tweeted on Tuesday:

As many of Falwell's followers gleefully pointed out, that's a photo of Trump on the cover of Playboy in the background.

Still, with a pandering speech and a board stocked with familiar names, it's easy to imagine this means Trump has the evangelical power-class vote sewn up. But that would be wrong. "This is a horrifying list, only vaguely representative of evangelical Christianity," according to Warren Cole Smith, an influential evangelical commentator. "Mark Twain once said the difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and a lightning-bug," he wrote in an email to CBS News on Tuesday. "This list, with a few exceptions, is made up of lightning-bugs. I'm sure the people who are on this list are on it because more leaders more representative of evangelicals refused to serve."

Trump's speech also earned scorn. Southern Baptist Convention policy head Russell Moore, arguably Trump's loudest evangelical critic, did not attend, and he tweeted in disgust at the standing ovation:

Despite Trump's efforts Tuesday, he remains an extremely divisive figure among evangelical leaders. A January poll of Republican pastors found just 5 percent planned to vote for Trump in the primaries, and there's no evidence that he has won the rest of them over as he moves toward the general election. (In a smaller poll of evangelical insiders in May, half of them said they would never vote for Trump "no matter what.") Some evangelicals who remain repulsed by his crude persona and ugly rhetoric have proposed abstaining from voting in the presidential election and focusing on down-ballot races. Washington pastor Thabiti Anyabwile has been using his blog, hosted by the conservative Gospel Coalition, to explain why he will be voting for Clinton over Trump. "I prefer the predictable over the unpredictable," he wrote in May in a post that compared the race to Stalin v. Hitler. "I regard a President Trump the worse of the two evils before us."

Trump's speech Tuesday admittedly drew some big names as organizers and attendees, including Ben Carson, Mike Huckabee, and evangelist Franklin Graham. But tellingly, even those who appeared to enjoy the event remain wary. At a press conference afterward, eight of the organizers, including Family Research Council president Tony Perkins, spoke glowingly of his performance. But when they were asked to raise their hands if they were willing to endorse him, not a single one did.

*****

Evangelical Leaders Fail to Endorse Trump

By Mike McManus
June 23, 2016

More than 1,000 evangelicals met with Donald Trump this week but when eight prominent organizers spoke at a press conference afterward, they were asked who was ready to endorse the winner of the Republican presidential primaries. None raised their hand.

Not Franklin Graham, Dr. James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, nor Family Research Council President Tony Perkins, Ralph Reed of the Faith and Freedom Coalition. Penny Nance, president of Concerned Women for America, said she felt the meeting was "positive. But the question still is whether I can feel confident in asking people to join me."

Trump's comments were often odd. "The next president is going to be very vital...in freeing up your religion, freeing up your thoughts. You really don't have religious freedom."

I doubt that one attendee agreed with that. They oppose threats to religious freedom, such as the insistence by the Obama Administration that employers give employees free "morning after pills" to terminate a pregnancy. But all feel they have personal religious freedom to choose a church or teach their children about God.

Trump also asserted, "The evangelical vote was mostly gotten by me." Not really. Sen. Ted Cruz won in 12 states with a high percentage of evangelicals such as Texas, Iowa, Kansas and Oklahoma. Trump did win much of the evangelical south, but in Missouri he squeaked out by 40.9% percent to 40.7%, but he lost those who attend church weekly by 20%.

Committed evangelicals sense he is not one of them. Many supported Cruz, such as Iowa evangelical leader Bob Vander Plaats, who mocked Trump's botched citation of "Two Corinthians and his admission that he's never asked God for forgiveness."

Trump even told attendees that things were different "when I used to go to church." However, he reassures us that he does attend every Easter and Christmas!

Trump pleased his audience by saying, "The first thing we will do is support Supreme Court Justices who are talented men and woman and pro-life." He has released a list of 11 noted conservative judges, from whom he promised to choose the next Supreme Court nominee if elected.

He surprised many by pledging to repeal the Johnson Amendment which prohibits tax-exempt organizations from endorsing or opposing political candidates. "I think it will be my greatest contribution to Christianity and all religions to allow you to speak openly. You have a right to do that. People walking down the street have more power than you, because they can say whatever they want."

However, a number of nationally prominent evangelicals were not even in attendance because they oppose his candidacy. For example, Dr. Russell Moore, President of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, wrote a column in The New York Times in September who called his support by evangelicals and social conservatives "illogical."

"To back Mr. Trump, these voters must repudiate everything they believe. His attitude toward women is that of a Bronze Age warlord. He tells us in one of his books that he revels in the fact he gets to sleep with some of the `top women of the world.' He has divorced two wives (so far) for other women."

His lack of "a moral compass" is not surprising since he built his career "off of gambling, a moral vice and an economic swindle that oppresses the poorest and most desperate," Moore wrote. He praises the "good things" done by Planned Parenthood, the nation's largest abortionist. At a time of high racial tensions, Trump "incites division, with slurs against Hispanic immigrants and with protectionist jargon."

Michael Cromartie of the Ethics and Public Policy Center wondered why none of the evangelicals asked Trump to release his tax returns, which all Presidential candidates have done for generations. "It is very sad and pathetic to see evangelicals seduced by power. Is this the new face of the Republican Party -- a misogynist, racist, owner of casinos, who won't even release his tax returns?"

Moore warns, "We should also count the cost of following Donald Trump. To do so would mean that we've decided to join the other side of the culture war, that image and celebrity and money and power and social Darwinist `winning' trump the conservation of moral principles and a just society."

If not one evangelical "leader" can endorse Trump, they ought to take the lead in pressing Republicans to nominate a man they can support enthusiastically.

Trump is not yet the Republican nominee.

Michel J. McManus, President of Marriage Savers and a syndicated columnist.

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