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How evangelicals are setting the stage for Trump's return

How evangelicals are setting the stage for Trump's return

FromPlaybook Deep Dive


How evangelicals are setting the stage for Trump's return

FromPlaybook Deep Dive

ratings:
Length:
49 minutes
Released:
Jun 23, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

The big debate in Washington this week is about realism versus idealism.
It played out first in foreign policy, when Joe Biden hosted Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi for a state dinner.

Biden has made big claims about how democratic ideals are at the heart
of American foreign policy; but he spent two days lavishing time and
attention on Modi, who is persecuting Muslims and cracking down on
public dissent from reporters and political opponents. 

Biden needs India to be an ally against China and that priority
outweighed the instinct to shun Modi for his creeping authoritarianism. 

We talk about this debate all the time when it comes to American foreign
policy.

But sometimes that same debate becomes central to American domestic
politics as well. 

And across town, just as Modi was wrapping up his joint address to
Congress, evangelical conservatives from across the country were
gathering at the Washington Hilton to hear from their own flawed
partner: Donald Trump.

Well actually not just Trump — Mike Pence, Ron DeSantis, Tim Scott,
Chris Christie, and every major Republican candidate is scheduled to
speak at the Faith & Freedom Coalition’s Road to Majority conference.

But, naturally, Trump is what religious conservatives are talking about.
After all, he is the dominant frontrunner for the GOP presidential
nomination. And he is the group’s keynote speaker at their gala dinner
on Saturday night. And he is also the politician about whom two things
can be said:

One, his personal and public life makes a mockery of the Christian
ideals of evangelical voters.

And, two, he is the person who has delivered more policy victories for
these same voters than any other president. 

The questions that evangelicals are debating in Washington this week are
whether that deal with Trump was worth it… and whether they should renew
the contract.

This week’s guest has a lot of thoughts about this. He is the founder
and chairman of the Faith & Freedom Coalition, Ralph Reed.

Reed was recruited in 1989 by Pat Robertson, the late televangelist, to
help run a new organization: the Christian Coalition. 

It grew to be a powerful political group that cemented social
conservatives as a core constituency of the Republican Party and made
issues such as opposition to abortion rights non-negotiable policies in
the GOP. 

As you will hear in this episode, Ralph Reed is a political junkie. He
left the Christian Coalition in 1997 and soon became one of the key
strategists for George W. Bush. 

And then in Obama’s first term, Reed struck up an unlikely friendship
with a guy named Donald Trump.

He did for Trump what he does for every presidential candidate who comes
calling for his advice: he explained how to win over evangelical voters,
who make up about 60 percent of the Republican presidential primary
electorate.

In his view it worked out pretty well: Evangelicals overwhelmingly
backed the thrice-married New York Playboy who famously botched bible
verses on the stump. And Trump kept his word when it came to their most
important issue: appointing Supreme Court judges who would overturn Roe
v. Wade.

So what will evangelicals do in the 2024 Republican presidential
primary?

That is the question that Playbook co-author and Deep Dive host Ryan
Lizza spoke with Reed about in a backroom at the Washington Hilton as
his conference attendees filed in.

Ryan Lizza is a Playbook co-author for POLITICO.
Ralph Reed is the chairman of the Faith and Freedom Coalition.
Kara Tabor is a producer for POLITICO audio. 
Alex Keeney is a senior producer for POLITICO audio.
Released:
Jun 23, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode