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Donald Trump lashes out at evangelicals for showing ‘sign of disloyality’

Donald Trump

Donald Trump lashes out at evangelicals for showing ‘sign of disloyality’

  • Former President Donald Trump lashed out at evangelicals for not supporting his presidential campaign.
  • The religious voting bloc that was crucial to his victory in 2016 has yet to publicly endorse him.
  • Trump called the lack of support a “sign of disloyalty,” during an interview with Real America’s Voice.

After appointing three conservative Supreme Court justices and making it possible for them to realise their long-held dream of overturning Roe v. Wade, former President Donald Trump lashed out at evangelicals for not supporting his most recent presidential campaign, calling it a “sign of disloyalty.”

The religious voting bloc that was crucial to Trump’s triumph in 2016 has not yet publicly endorsed his quest for the presidency in 2024, according to Trump, 76, who spoke on Real America’s Voice’s “The Water Cooler” on Monday.

“That’s a sign of disloyalty,” Trump told host David Brody. “There’s great disloyalty in the world of politics, and that’s a sign of disloyalty.”

The 45th President said that by choosing Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett, and Neil Gorsuch, he made it possible for the Supreme Court to overturn the important 1973 abortion ruling last year.

“Nobody has ever done more for right-to-life than Donald Trump. I put three Supreme Court justices who all voted, and they got something that they’ve been fighting for … many, many years, but nobody said they could win it. They won — Roe v. Wade — they won. They finally won,” Trump said.

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Although many Democratic politicians ran on the topic during the midterm elections, the former president noted that he was “disappointed” that evangelicals did not support the court’s ruling.

“And I was a little disappointed because I thought they could have fought much harder during the election, during the 2022 election,” Trump said.

“Because, you know, they won, and a lot of them didn’t fight or weren’t really around to fight. And it did energize the Democrats. But a lot of the people who wanted and fought for years to get it … they weren’t there protesting and doing what they could have done,” he added.

“With all that being said,” Trump continued, “there’s nobody that’s done more for the movement than I have.”

The powerful Dr. Robert Jeffress, the pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas, and other evangelical leaders have yet to endorse Trump’s third presidential bid, which he announced in November.

In response to a question about whether he would back former Vice President Mike Pence in 2024 from the media earlier this month, Jeffress said, “he’ll certainly be a strong contender.”

Longtime Trump supporter Jeffress also stated that he was delaying his support for a Republican contender.

“My sense of where we are right now — and I’ve talked to the former president recently — I think that, eventually, if not immediately, evangelicals will end up coalescing around former President Trump again,” he said.

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