By GABBY ORR
08/12/2019 05:00 AM EDT
A Trump-supporting West Virginia state senator who represents many evangelicals got three phone calls from constituents complaining about Trumpâs profanity after a recent rally.
Paul Hardesty didnât pay much attention to President Donald Trumpâs campaign rally in Greenville, N.C., last month until a third concerned constituent rang his cell phone. The residents of Hardestyâs district â heâs a Trump-supporting West Virginia state senator â were calling to complain that Trump was âusing the Lordâs name in vain,â as Hardesty recounted.
âThe third phone call is when I actually went and watched his speech because each of them sounded distraught,â said Hardesty, who describes himself as a conservative Democrat. Hereâs what he would have seen. Trump crowing, âthey'll be hit so goddamn hard,â while bragging about bombing Islamic State militants. And Trump recounting his warning to a wealthy businessman: âIf you don't support me, you're going to be so goddamn poor.â
To most of America, the comments went unnoticed. Instead, the nation was gripped after the rally by the moment when a âsend her backâ chant broke out as Trump went after Somali-born Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar, an American citizen. But some Trump supporters were more fixated on the casual use of the word âgoddamnâ â an off-limits term for many Christians â not to mention the numerous other profanities laced throughout the rest of the speech.
The issue has recently hit a nerve among those who have become some of the presidentâs most reliable supporters: white evangelicals â who comprise much of Hardestyâs district. The group was key to Trumpâs 2016 win, helping bolster his standing in critical swing states, and Trump likely needs to maintain that support if he wants to win a second term. But some are growing fatigued with the irreverent language that often seeps into Trumpâs rallies and official events.
âIâve had people come to me and say, âYou know I voted for [Trump], but if he doesnât tone down the rhetoric, I might just stay home this time,ââ Hardesty said in an interview, adding that he has yet to hear back from anyone inside the White House after urging the president in a formal letter to âreflect on your comments and never utter those words again.â Coarse language is, of course, far from the presidentâs only behavior that might turn off the religious right. Heâs been divorced twice, faced constant allegations of extramarital affairs, previously supported abortion rights and has stumbled when trying to discuss the specifics of religion, once saying âtwo Corinthiansâ instead of âSecond Corinthians.â Yet to this point, Trump has maintained broad support from evangelicals, including the unwavering backing of prominent conservative Christian leaders.
Two pro-Trump pastors, both of whom requested anonymity out of fear of retaliation, admitted in interviews that theyâve winced and cringed their way through some of the presidentâs more provocative speeches, or the ones that contained multiple expletives. One of the pastors said he was âappalledâ by the presidentâs remarks at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference in March, in which he accused his political rivals of trying to run him out of office with âbullshitâ investigations and oversight actions. âYou know, Iâm totally off script right now,â Trump boasted at the time. The rest of his speech was littered with cursing, as he promised to âkeep radical Islamic terrorists the hell out of our countryâ and throw undocumented immigrants âthe hell out.â
âIâm not going to get into private conversations, but I made sure he knew that type of rhetoric is unacceptable. This was not just an event for adults,â said one of the pastors, who is close with several members of the Trump administration. âI think this president needs to be president to all of the people and realize that kids look up to him and adults look up to him,â said Hardesty. âCarrying that type of language from behind the presidential seal is offensive.â To be sure, foul-mouthed figures are nothing new in modern politics. One of Trumpâs 2020 rivals, former Vice President Joe Biden, was caught calling the Affordable Care Act âa big fucking dealâ at the billâs signing in March 2010. Bidenâs predecessor, Dick Cheney, told a Democratic senator to âfuck himselfâ on the Senate floor in 2004. Two other presidential hopefuls â Beto OâRourke and Tulsi Gabbard â have used profanity in recent public statements, and countless more examples can be found in the presidential archives.
âWell, Jesus Christ, of course, heâs racist,â OâRourke said of Trump just this week during an appearance on MSNBC.
The difference, though, is that Trump enjoys the support of the religious right â and losing the groupâs support would be catastrophic for his reelection bid. About 80 percent of white evangelicals cast their ballots for Trump in 2016 and 61 percent of the broader evangelical voting bloc believes the U.S. is heading in the right direction under his administration, according to a 2018 survey by the Public Religion Research Institute. Evangelicals are also more likely to vote than other demographic groups, and gravitate toward Republican candidates when they do. And in swing states like Florida, North Carolina and Michigan, evangelicals dominate the religious composition, eclipsing Catholics, mainline Protestants and other Christian denominations. Several of the presidentâs most steadfast evangelical allies pushed back against concerns that Trumpâs swearing could jeopardize this powerful voting bloc. At the very least, they said, itâs not an issue for them. Alveda King, a Fox News contributor and the niece of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., said sheâs inclined to extend grace to the president when he swears or makes inappropriate comments.
âI remember Godâs love and mercy towards me,â she said.
Part of the reason Trump has previously escaped criticism for cursing is because his supporters were more drawn to the perceived authenticity of his blunt statements than they were offended by the vulgarity, Melissa Mohr, the author of a book on swearing, wrote for Time in June 2016.
âWhen we hear people swear, we often assume that their words spring from a deep well of real feeling,â Mohr said at the time.
But some curse words could have adverse effects for Trump, particularly with his evangelical audience.
âCarelessly invoking the Lordâs name in a fit of anger is one thing,â said one of the pro-Trump pastors, quickly adding that he would not encourage such behavior. âBut,â he continued, ârepeatedly doing it for shock value ⌠that does raise questions about the presidentâs respect for people of faith.â
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