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Pew Research CenterJuly 12, 2016
Evangelicals Rally to Trump, Religious ‘Nones’ Back Clinton

Like religious ‘nones,’ black Protestants strongly favor Clinton

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Like religious ‘nones,’ black Protestants strongly favor Clinton

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Evangelicals Rally to Trump, Religious ‘Nones’ Back Clinton
Evangelicals’ election choices driven more by opposition to Clinton than support for Trump
Religious ‘nones’ who favor Clinton divided between those who see their choice as mainly FOR Clinton, AGAINST Trump
Trump support among white evangelical voters on par with Romney in 2012; Clinton support among religious ‘nones’ on par with Obama
One-third of GOP voters are white evangelicals; more than a quarter of Democratic voters are religious ‘nones’
White evangelical voters prefer Trump to Clinton on almost every issue
Among GOP evangelicals and Democratic ‘nones,’ big enthusiasm gap between those who supported their party’s nominee in primaries and others
On balance, Republicans more strongly supportive of Trump than Romney, Democrats less strongly supportive of Clinton than Obama
Like religious ‘nones,’ black Protestants strongly favor Clinton
Fewer say it is important for president to have strong religious beliefs, and shrinking majority says houses of worship contribute to solving social problems
Similar levels of support for Trump among both evangelicals who attend church regularly and those who do not
Similar levels of support for Trump among both evangelicals who attend church regularly and those who do not
Similar levels of support for Trump among both evangelicals who attend church regularly and those who do not

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