

By Dr. Paul J. Croce
Professor of History
Director of American Studies
Stetson University
To critics of Donald Trump, the only thing more exasperating than the presidentโs insults, impulsive decisions, and assertions of absolute executive power is witnessing that a steady stream of apparently damning reports has almost no impact on his large band of core supporters. Representative Patricia Schroeder called Ronald Reagan the โTeflon Presidentโ because the accusations under his watch about the Iran-Contra and Savings-and-Loan Scandals didnโt stick. Trumpโs Teflon shows an upgrade even from Reaganโs resistance to scandal.
There is a widespread view that Trump owes his success to the proliferation of alternative and sympathetic news outlets, along with his steady denigration of the mainstream media. This can explain the messages his supporters receive, but not why they believe them. A closer look at the voters most committed to Trump can shed light on the receiving side of Trumpโs Teflon appeal.
White Evangelicals are Trumpโs largest and most consistent voting bloc, with poll numbers reliably above 70%, and that support has remained steady through the Corona Pandemic. Although the president is not religiously pious, he gains support from Evangelicals not just because of his judicial appointments, but also because he appeals to their outsider status, sounds like an authoritative preacher, and does not let fancy talk intrude on proclaiming his convictions.
Trumpโs Kinship with Evangelical Ways
This Christian tradition emerged historically in different denominations, often in defiance of institutions and hierarchy. Evangelicals have emphasized spirit over structure. Similarly, Trump has followed his own political impulses across the political spectrum. He has been registered as Democrat, Independent, and Republican; in 2000, he ran for President with the Reform Party. Now, within the Republican Party, he shows little deference for its leadership. And he is the first US president with no prior political or military experience. To Evangelicals, Trump has the look and feel of a fellow outsider.
And Trump speaks like Evangelicals who preach from the heart in their โplain styleโ emphasizing forcefulness and clarity. In the โheatโ of โfire and brimstoneโ sermons, passion of delivery has itself been an indication of authenticity. From this point of view, the factual errors and gaffes that Trumpโs critics ridicule sound like honest spontaneity.
Also like Evangelicals, Trump shows little deference for high learning, and even suspects that it can serve as an elegant cloak for nefarious designs. Gilbert Tennent in 1740 warned that the โDanger of an Unconverted Ministryโ stemmed from being too โletter-learnedโ with the โlightโ of mere human reasoning. Too much learning suggested more faith in the worldly ways of โnatural menโ rather than reliance on the fire of faith in the โnew natureโ brought by conversion to bring Jesus onto the seat of oneโs soul. To Evangelicals, heat trumps light, just as to this president, there are dangers lurking in the fine words of elitesโthe more fine, the more fake, as many Evangelical preachers have warned about the Corona Virus, as Katherine Stewart points out. Trump has often given unspoken endorsement of these views by flaunting advice for social distancing; for example, at a speech about the national emergency, he shook hands with all the officials on the platform with him, except one who offered his elbow instead.
Evangelical Ways of Thinking
In early modern Europe, Evangelicalism provided assurance and spiritual power for those out of power. This tradition found a welcome home in the US among โcommonersโ fighting the American Revolution for โno bishops and no king,โ and in the leveling atmosphere of frontiers with few authority structures. In a nation of outsiders, Evangelicals gained status in early American culture, but since the late nineteenth century, their influence has declined considerably with the rise of religious liberalism, diverse faiths, and secular trends ignoring or defying religion.
Yet as Joel Carpenter observes, their own history has lent Evangelicals a shield of defense for turning cultural retreats into sources of strength. They are a group that at once feels central to the American experience, but mocked, and with those memories, many yearn for respect. They are well poised for the Trump message: โMake American Great again.โ In fact, his campaign rallies resemble religious revivals. In both settings, the faithful remnant seeks a revival of something held to be true but now in danger.
With Trumpโs remarkable stamina on the campaign trail, he can seem like a preacher energized by the spirit. By comparison, his prepared remarks sound tame, as if a caged tiger. He is most charismatic when speaking spontaneously, often in mocking (and for his audiences, entertaining) ridicule of those in power. This folksy style has a tough element, for example, in his January 2020 speech justifying the killing of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani, the president mocked the war powers of Congress by saying that the โRadical Left Democratsโ wanted me to โget permission from Congressโโโpermission,โ he repeated slowly to let the ridicule sink in. That style also has a playful side, such as when he boasted that โI can be more presidential than any candidate other than maybe [Abraham] Lincoln when heโs wearing his hat.โ
Stand By Your Man
With his humor and tough but folksy style, Trump has established a relationship with his supporters, who are then willing to overlook his shortcomings. While his opponents are appalled with his blunt sexual aggressiveness and abusive comments about residents of developing countries, American inner cities, and immigrants, his supporters either quietly endorse these parts of Trumpโs message, or are willing to forgive them to gain the policies he champions. His tone of frank toughness in solidarity with his closest supporters surrounds these explicit comments, making them easier to adopt.
Trump has been a lifelong church attender, as a child at his familyโs Presbyterian Church in Queens, NY, and then at Marble Collegiate Church, on Fifth Avenue for almost 50 years, although he has never actually become a member. Marbleโs former pastor, Norman Vincent Peale, also wrote The Power of Positive Thinking, with its Evangelical confidence in material manifestations of spiritual gifts lending religious support to Americansโ hopes for social mobility. This prosperity gospel is not supported by all Evangelicals, but it attracted Trump. Marble Church is where Trump married his first wife, Ivana, and where he first saw Marla Maples; their affair continued while he was married and while both attended services. Trump and Maples married at the same church.
Have Trumpโs improprieties been reasons to vote against him? One ardent supporter responded bluntly, โhe doesnโt have to be a Christian to be part of Godโs plan.โ Many Evangelicals are fond of comparing the president with the 6th-century BCE Persian King Cyrus who, despite being a pagan, โin order to fulfill the word of the Lord,โ freed the Israelites from Babylonian Captivity, enabling their prosperity (2 Chronicles 36:22-23). Similarly, these believers maintain that Trumpโs โpaganismโ is less significant than his ability to appoint conservative judges and bring โa wrecking ball to political correctness,โ as Rev. Lance Wallnau hoped and predicted before the 2016 election in Godโs Chaos Candidate: Donald Trump and the American Unraveling. Flags in the front yards of Trump supporters similarly express their ardent belief: TRUMP in big letters followed by โNo More Bullshit.โ Plain talk, vernacular style, showing total impatience with business as usual.
These theological and popular defenses of Trump came to mind when I asked Trump voters about his crude comments toward women and non-whites and his promise to โdrain the swampโ of power elites; isnโt he himself another elite citizen? One responded bluntly, โHeโs our billionaire,โ one of the elites who, even with shortcomings, is on their side. He is a powerful guy presenting himself as a tribune of average citizens, often proudly unrefined, who have felt shafted by government and business alike. And that stance appeals to about half the country.
The Evangelical tradition offers Trump an apparent firewall of protection from his critics. Even stinging indictments sound to his supporters like โfake news,โ the political equivalent of heresies. Some evangelicals have strayed from their fellows, most boldly in Mark Galliโs Christianity Today editorial and with groundswell worries for years, but a majority maintain their support of the President.
Originally published by History News Network, 04.19.2020, reprinted with permission for educational, non-commercial purposes.
