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‘They go to church, but they don’t vote’: Trump tells Christians to back him
“They go to church every Sunday, but they don’t vote,” he said, adding in a half-joke that “in four years, you don’t have to vote. OK? In four years, don’t vote. I don’t care.”
If elected, Trump would be ineligible to run for president again in 2028 because of term limits.
Evangelical voters were crucial for Trump’s 2016 victory and again in his failed 2020 campaign, when 84 per cent of white evangelical Protestants voted for him, according to the Pew Research Centre.
Trump promised to protect their interests on Saturday, as he vowed to “aggressively defend religious freedom.”
“We will protect Christians in our schools, in our military, in our government, in our workplaces, in our hospitals and in our public square,” he told supporters.
The former president claimed that he had “stood up to the communists, Marxists and fascists to defend religious liberty like no other president has ever done.”
“If I took this shirt off, you’d see a beautiful, beautiful person. But you’d see wounds all over, all over me, I’ve taken a lot of wounds,” Trump said.
Many Republican officials and conservative voters now are pressuring Trump to support a national abortion ban or restrictions.
However, Trump has refrained from making any such commitment, which could prove politically perilous, telling supporters it is instead up to states to individually decide.
“The people will decide, and that’s the way it should be,” he told the crowd.
Trump additionally promised to create “a new federal task force on fighting anti-Christian bias” that would investigate supposed “illegal discrimination, harassment, persecution” of US Christians.
Almost half (49 per cent) of Americans believe that religion’s influence is declining in the United States and that this is a bad thing, according to a Pew Research survey published in March.
The number of Americans identifying as Christian has dropped from nearly 90 per cent in the 1990s to less than two-thirds of the population in 2022, mostly due to rising numbers of people who are not religiously affiliated.
Congress remains overwhelmingly Christian, with 88 per cent of the voting members sworn in in 2023 identifying as such.
Trump’s Democratic rival in the election, President Joe Biden, who favours abortion rights, is a devout Catholic who attends mass regularly.
For many white evangelical Christians – a conservative denomination that makes up about 14 per cent of US voters – it is crucial that religion stays relevant in public life.
Trump told the crowd that the political left wanted to “silence you, demoralise you, and they want to keep you out of politics.”
“They don’t want you to vote, that’s why you have to vote,” he said, adding “if you vote, no, we cannot lose.”
Trump will face Biden in the first 2024 presidential debate on Thursday.