Manhattan billionaire Donald Trump,
a pro-abortion Republican until recently, appears to have little in common with
evangelical Christians. But he is increasingly gaining their support as he
openly courts this key voting bloc.
Just two weeks out from the Iowa caucuses, Trump will
speak Monday at Liberty University, a private school in Lynchburg, Virginia and
an evangelical bastion. The visit coincides with a holiday commemorating civil
rights leader Martin Luther King.
Speaking at the university has been a rite of passage
for conservative presidential candidates from Ronald Reagan in the 1980's to
Ted Cruz, Trump's main Republican rival, who launched his campaign there in
March.
Cruz, a Texas senator whose father is a Cuban-born
evangelical preacher, already enjoys strong support from the evangelical
community.
Trump and Cruz are locked in a tight
race in Iowa, which on February 1 becomes the first state to vote for party
nominees.
News that Trump, known more for womanizing, an
extravagant lifestyle and bombastic rhetoric than for piety, will speak on
campus triggered threats of student protests.
Evangelical voters typically support candidates that
are conservative on social issues, an area of weakness for Trump.
According to polls, nearly two-thirds of evangelical
Republicans say a candidate's position on abortion is the most important issue
driving their voting decision.
But Trump, 69, who during his political life has been
a Democrat and an independent, is only a recent convert to the
"pro-life" anti-abortion position prevalent among evangelical
Christians.
In recent weeks Trump has stressed his own faith as he
stepped up efforts to reach out to this critical Republican voter group.
"I am an evangelical. I'm a Christian. I'm a
Presbyterian," he said last month.
And when asked recently about his favorite book, Trump
simply responded: "the Bible." But the real estate mogul can't name a
single verse.
Winning over the evangelical voting bloc could set
Trump on a path to become the Republican Party's presidential nominee.
"It's quite
mandatory for a Republican to get the support of the evangelicals," said
Baylor University professor Lydia Bean, author of "The Politics of
Evangelical Identity."
Trump, she said, "has absolutely no arguments.
That's what is interesting."
The reality TV star "has zero claim to be a
Christian leader, absolutely zero. Behind the scene, I think that a lot of
leaders don't want to support him, they'd rather prefer Ted Cruz," she
said.
"That's why he has to attack. Donald Trump
doesn't care, he can literally say anything to get what he wants."
Trump is ready to battle Cruz on his own turf, and is
not shy about launching personal attacks.
In late December, Trump proclaimed: "Not a lot of
evangelicals come out of Cuba," a thinly veiled attack on Cruz and his
father, Rafael Cruz.
Trump has also questioned whether Cruz, who was born
to an American mother in Canada, can even run for president.
This strategy to play offense is already paying
dividends.
An early January NBC News/SurveyMonkey poll gave Trump
35 percent support among evangelicals, just behind Cruz but well ahead of
retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, a Seventh Day Adventist.
Trump is taking advantage of the lack of unity among
evangelicals, whose leaders have been unable to publicly choose a candidate
among a crowded Republican field that also includes Florida Senator Marco Rubio
and ex-pastor Mike Huckabee.
The evangelical voter base feels forgotten by national
leaders in Washington and is attracted by anti-establishment candidates like
Cruz and Trump.
Trump has an
especially high anti-establishment ranking as he has never served in any public
office or in the military.
Cruz may have fought the Republican establishment but
he remains a US senator -- in other words, a much-criticized Washington
politician.
Trump's anti-Muslim diatribes find resonance among
evangelicals, a group that according to the Pew Research Center has the least
favorable opinion of Muslims in the United States.
"It's an advantage" for Trump, Bean said.
"Unfortunately, for most of the evangelicals,
attacking Muslims is the moral thing to do and it is a very good point for him.
So yes, we can imagine that he will give some new comments on that."
And if evangelical leaders don't necessarily want him
to represent Republicans come the November general election, many "are
afraid to attack Donald Trump because he's popular with the base," Bean
added.
