Poll: About 7 in 10 white evangelicals approve of Trump's job

Trump's approval among his evangelical base remains steady

NEW YORK — About 7 in 10 white evangelical Protestants approve of President Trump’s handling of his job, according to a new survey -- support from a cornerstone of his political base that has remained strong following a polarizing church visit and a Supreme Court ruling on LGBT discrimination that disheartened some conservatives.

Trump’s 72 percent approval among white evangelicals in June, released Wednesday by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center, represents a fall of six percentage points since a similar April survey. But it also comes as his campaign steps up its appeals to religious voters ahead of November’s election, and after Trump faced criticism from two faith leaders in the wake of his June 1 photo op at St. John’s Church near the White House, for which protesters were forcibly cleared from a nearby park.

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The survey also was conducted after a Supreme Court decision last month that shielded LGBT people from employment discrimination, a ruling that dismayed religious conservatives and saw Trump-appointed Justice Neil Gorsuch side with more liberal justices. The survey’s findings about Trump’s white evangelical approval are in line with a fall in his general approval among all Americans, which declined from 44 percent in April to 39 percent in June.

Despite the tick downward, Trump’s approval among white evangelicals has remained largely consistent over his presidency, like his approval rating overall.

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Beyond evangelicals’ sustained approval, the survey also found a majority of two other Christian groups continuing to register approval of the president. Trump tallied 56 percent approval among nonevangelical white Protestants in June and 54 percent approval among white Catholics.

Among Black Protestants, Trump’s approval ticked up from 10 percent in January to 21 percent in April, but fell back down to 12 percent in June, amid ongoing demonstrations against racial injustice following the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

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Trump’s approval among Hispanic Catholics in June stood at 23 percent, with 74 percent disapproving, similar to its level in January. Religiously unaffiliated voters, a category that includes those who identify as atheist or agnostic and those who identify as “nothing in particular,” registered 24 percent approval of Trump in June, also similar to January.

The survey did not break down Trump’s approval among other religious groups due to insufficient sample sizes.

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