White Too Long by Robert P. Jones

Share this post

Why Donald Trump's Indictment Will Matter So Little to Most of his Christian Supporters

robertpjones.substack.com

Why Donald Trump's Indictment Will Matter So Little to Most of his Christian Supporters

White evangelicals have long abandoned their “values voters” brand.

Robert P. Jones
Mar 21, 2023
27
Share

The country is collectively holding its breath this week to see whether former President Donald Trump will be indicted for falsifying business records to cover up the payment of $130,000 of “hush money” to adult film actress Stormy Daniels on the eve of the 2016 election. If this comes to pass, it will mark the first time in American history a former president has been indicted.

One of the most blatant acts of public hypocrisy I’ve witnessed, in more than two decades observing conservative white Christians, was their easy discarding of the “values voters” moniker along the road to supporting Trump. This abrupt abandonment of the “values voters” brand was particularly striking, given that its original purpose was to exploit the sexual indiscretions of Bill Clinton as a campaign weapon to be wielded against other democratic candidates.

Jonathan Merritt highlighted the hypocrisy in a 2016 Atlantic article. He quotes Southern Baptist Seminary President Al Mohler making this point explicitly, “If I were to support, much less endorse, Donald Trump for president, I would actually have to go back and apologize to former President Bill Clinton.”

By 2020, Mohler had nonetheless become a public supporter of Trump, even standing by his vote for Trump after the January 6th insurrection. “Based upon the binary choice we faced on November the third, I believe then that that was the right action to take,” Mohler said on his podcast on January 7, 2021. “And going back to November the third, I would do the same thing again.” To my knowledge, Mohler has yet to issue an apology to Bill Clinton.

As we anticipate the potential indictment of a former president, the data suggests that even such an unprecedented event would have little impact on the support for Trump by white evangelical Protestants and other conservative white Christians.

White Too Long by Robert P. Jones is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.

The Unwavering Support of Trump by White Evangelical Protestants

First, we have the testimony of the trends: the unwavering support of Trump by these former “values voters” across Trump’s presidency, despite numerous well-known episodes of lewd, bigoted, and unethical behavior. Check out the chart below.

Now, consider just a few of the public revelations and remarks by Trump that occurred during this period covered by that chart:

  • October 7, 2016: The Access Hollywood tape is released. On a hot mic, Trump brags about forcibly kissing and groping women, declaring, “And when you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything…. Grab them by the p---y, you can do anything.” Between September 2016, before the tape is released, and 2017, Trump’s favorability among white evangelical Protestants climbs 12 points, from 61% to 73%.

  • August 12, 2017: The white supremacist Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, which gathered around a statue of Robert E. Lee that was slated for removal, resulted in the murder of a counter protester. Trump refused to denounce the white supremacists, declared that there were “very fine people on both sides,” and suggested that it was the counter-protesters who were “very, very violent.” Trump’s favorability among white evangelicals remains at 73%.

  • January 12, 2018: The Wall Street Journal breaks the story about Trump’s hush money payments to Stormy Daniels, reporting her claim that Trump had an affair with the adult film actress at a celebrity golf tournament in 2006. Trump was just a year into his marriage with Melania and just months into being a new father following the birth of his son Barron. At the time, Daniels was 27 and Trump was 60. Additionally, Trump’s inhumane policy of separating immigrant children, some as young as four, from their families, came to light in April. Trump’s favorability among white evangelicals remains at 73% throughout 2018.

  • December 18, 2019: Trump is impeached for the first time for attempting to get Ukraine to announce an investigation into Joe Biden in exchange for US military and other assistance. Trump’s favorability among white evangelicals remains at 73% throughout 2019 and even inches up to 74% in 2020.

  • January 6, 2021: Trump incites a violent insurrection designed to thwart the counting of state electoral votes in order to stay in power. The 2020 election becomes the first in US history that is not marked by a peaceful transition of power. On January 13, 2021, Trump is impeached for a second time. By the fall of 2021, after losing the election, inciting an insurrection, and becoming the first US president in history to be impeached for a second time, his favorability finally drops among white evangelical Protestants—but only 7 percentage points to 67%.

  • By the fall of 2022, Trump’s favorability among white evangelical Protestants dips modestly to 63%, but his popularity remains comparable to this same point in his 2016 campaign.

    Share


Related

White Too Long by Robert P. Jones
Trump and His Allegedly Disloyal White Evangelical Supporters
Dear #WhiteTooLong readers, I’m happy to report that my new book, The Hidden Roots of White Supremacy and the Path to a Shared American Future, is moving through production at Simon & Schuster. February will be copyedit month. While it can be tedious, there’s also something satisfying about the process, which feels like reaching for the fine grit sandpap…
Read more
4 months ago · 9 likes · 1 comment · Robert P. Jones

“I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody….”

At a campaign stop at Sioux Center, Iowa’s Dordt College—an institution whose website assures students that “Everything at Dordt revolves around Jesus Christ”— Trump infamously described his confidence in the unfettered allegiance of his supporters. “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn't lose any voters, OK?” Trump remarked. “It's, like, incredible.” NPR described the audience that day as “receptive” to his message.

In a series of PRRI surveys across Trump’s presidency, we set out to see just how many Trump supporters would explicitly affirm such an allegiance to the former president. In the fall of 2020, nearly half of Republicans (49%) and white evangelicals (46%) who approved of Trump’s presidency declared there is almost nothing Trump could do to lose their approval. These findings were generally consistent in each year throughout Trump’s presidency.

The Abandonment of Even the Pretense of Principle

Finally, PRRI polling also documented a stunning wholesale abandonment of even the pretense of a political ethic of principle by white evangelical Protestants and other conservative white Christians. In 2011 and again in 2016, PRRI asked Americans whether “an elected official who commits an immoral act in their personal life can still behave ethically and fulfill their duties in their public and professional life.”

Across this five year period, no group shifted their position more dramatically than white evangelical Protestants. In 2011, only 30% of white evangelical Protestants agreed that an elected official can behave ethically even if they have committed transgressions in their personal life, a position one might expect from a group billing itself as “values voters.” But by 2016, with Trump at the top of the Republican ticket, 72% of white evangelicals agreed—a 42-point jump from 2011. These results were largely unchanged the last time PRRI asked this question in 2020.

Share

Trump may yet make history again this week, becoming not only the only president to be impeached twice but the first former president to be indicted. Should he run in 2024, it is likely that such a distinction will hurt him in the general election, especially given that he lost the 2020 election by over 7 million votes and his favorability ratings among all Americans are consistently underwater.

But an indictment is unlikely to have a great impact on the white evangelicals and other conservative white Christians who have been his staunchest supporters. To those who have long abandoned their posture as “values voters” and have fully embraced an authoritarian figure they see as the savior and protector of white Christian America, the moral repulsiveness of the crass violation of his marriage vows and the legal evidence of a coverup, even if they are substantiated in a court of law, will likely have little weight. As has been the case since Trump’s emergence as a national political figure in 2015, any excuse to deny the obvious will do. An indictment—particularly by a District Attorney who is a Black Democrat from Manhattan who Trump has already derided as a politically motivated “racist”—is likely to reconfirm their perception of a world upside down and strengthen their allegiance to Trump.

Share

Leave a comment


Recent and Popular on #WhiteToo Long Substack

White Too Long by Robert P. Jones
A Preview of My Forthcoming Book: The Hidden Roots of White Supremacy and the Path to a Shared American Future
The lifecycle of a book has a number of distinct stages. Here’s a behind the scenes look at what that process has been like, up to this point, for my forthcoming book, The Hidden Roots of White Supremacy and the Path to a Shared American Future: February 2021: First draft of book proposal sent to my literary agent…
Read more
3 months ago · 15 likes · 4 comments · Robert P. Jones
White Too Long by Robert P. Jones
Lent, Confession, and the "No True Scotsman" Fallacy
This week marks the mid-point of the season of Lent, which runs this year from Wednesday, February 22 to Thursday, April 6. Beginning with Ash Wednesday, these 40-days (not counting Sundays) are designed to be opportunities for sober reflection and acts of confession, both individual and corporate. This period of introspection leads to high point of Hol…
Read more
3 months ago · 25 likes · Robert P. Jones
White Too Long by Robert P. Jones
Five Charts that Explain the Desperate Turn to MAGA among Conservative White Christians
I prefaced my 2016 book, The End of White Christian America (EWCA), with an “Obituary for White Christian America.” It read, in part: After a long life spanning nearly two hundred and forty years, White Christian America—a prominent cultural force in the nation’s history—has died. WCA first began to exhibit troubling symptoms in the 1960s when white main…
Read more
3 months ago · 32 likes · 3 comments · Robert P. Jones

27
Share
Previous
Next
Comments
Top
New
Community

No posts

Ready for more?

© 2023 Robert P. Jones
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start WritingGet the app
Substack is the home for great writing

Our use of cookies

We use necessary cookies to make our site work. We also set performance and functionality cookies that help us make improvements by measuring traffic on our site. For more detailed information about the cookies we use, please see our privacy policy. ✖