Washington Examiner / Magazine
April 4, 2023 Issue
April 4, 2023 Print Edition
Cover Story
Trump and the religious Right’s unhappy ending
Donald Trump’s presidential victory in 2016 had many causes, but a bargain he made with religious conservatives belongs at or near the top of the list. Their support was crucial, especially once the death of Justice Antonin Scalia meant whoever won the election would tip the Supreme Court in his party’s favor. And that is exactly how it played out. For a while, it seemed like a good deal. Christian leaders spoke of Trump in the most generous terms and frequently acted as ambassadors between him and their followers, many of whom were uneasy about his uncouth persona. And Trump, with much guidance from his advisers, prioritized protecting religious liberty, restoring faith in public life, and, most importantly, appointing judges to the Supreme Court whose originalist understanding of the Constitution coincided with the religious Right’s long-held desire to overturn Roe v. Wade and strike down the federally protected right to abortion. TRUMP INDICTED: CAN HE TURN MANHATTAN GRAND JURY VOTE INTO 2024 GOLD? Even after the ugliness of the 2020 election and the nastiness of the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, it wasn’t clear the partnership had fully run its course. Trump’s three Supreme Court picks, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett, were the backbone of the majority that overturned Roe last summer, a 50-year mission for the Right and of great significance to Christians. And in the lower courts, Trump’s judicial...

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