March 8, 2026

The Religious Right Is Still Sticking by Trump. Sadly, There’s a Long, Grim Pattern

070920-10-Trump-Religion
The Religious Right Is Still Sticking by Trump. Sadly, There's a Long, Grim Pattern

The Religious Right Is Still Sticking by Trump. Sadly, There's a Long, Grim Pattern
Donald Trump prays between Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, and Pastor Andrew Brunson. Photograph: Yuri Gripas/Reuters

Is there a line Trump could cross that would cause evangelicals to abandon him? Don’t bet on it.


The Religious Right Is Still Sticking by Trump. Sadly, There's a Long, Grim Pattern

By Sarah Posner
Investigative Journalist
The Guardian


As Donald Trump, aided by the attorney general, Bill Barr, orchestrates a militarized, armed-to-the-teeth crackdown, terrorizing lawful protesters of racism and police brutality, much of Trump’s white evangelical base is cheering him as a courageous, godly leader facing down protesters falsely depicted as “professional anarchists”, “cultural Marxists” and “domestic terrorists”.

For Trump’s Christian partisans, his Monday night photo op in front of St John’s Episcopal church in Washington DC, after Barr ordered the park between the White House and the church cleared of protesters with teargas, is just another illustration that Trump is a mighty protector of freedom – the freedom of his white Christian supporters, anyway.

A common refrain in white evangelical circles is to condemn the police murder of George Floyd as, in the anodyne words of the evangelist and Trump ally Franklin Graham, a “terrible tragedy that should not have happened and should never happen again”. In this all-too prevalent way of thinking, there’s only one cure for racism. As Dan Patrick, the Republican lieutenant governor of Texas, told Fox News on Wednesday, the country could only be “healed” by people accepting Jesus Christ.

But when it comes to the systemic change demanded by lawful protesters all over the country, from its largest cities to its small towns, Trump’s defenders draw the line. “We cannot heal through commissions and blue-ribbon panels and more laws,” Patrick told Trump’s favorite network. Graham wrote in a Facebook post, “New laws and more government give-away programs are not the answer. It’s a heart problem, and only God can change the human heart.”

This white evangelical opposition to laws and policies addressing systemic racism is nothing new. At other similarly transformative moments in recent American history, white fundamentalists and evangelicals viewed the advance of civil rights in America as the nefarious work of leftist outsiders, and opposed laws and policy designed to promote equal rights.

READ ENTIRE ARTICLE AT THE GUARDIAN