Khazen

President-elect Donald Trump pumps his fist after giving his acceptance speech as his wife Melania Trump, right, and their son Barron Trump follow him during his election night rally in New York (AP Photo/John Locher)

By CatholicHerald

Media coverage in the run-up to the US election made much of Donald
Trump’s “Catholic problem” – but exit polls revealed that Catholics
voted 52 per cent for the president-elect and only 45 per cent for
Hillary Clinton. The election continued a trend of Catholics voting for the winning presidential candidate.

Within Catholic voters there was a sharp divide. White Catholics
supported Trump by a clear margin – 60 per cent to 37 per cent – while
Hispanic Catholics preferred Clinton 67 per cent to 26 per cent.

Dr Mark Gray of the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate
(CARA) at Georgetown University told the Catholic News Agency:
“Catholics continue to be the only major religious voting block that can
shift from one election to the next.

“This is what makes the Catholic vote such an important swing vote.
Presidential candidates who win the Catholic vote almost always win the
presidency.” Trump made several direct appeals to Catholic voters. In a letter to a Catholic conference he pledged his commitment to pro-life causes and religious freedom. He subsequently gave an interview to the Catholic television network EWTN in which he said religious liberty was in “tremendous trouble”.

A Pew Research Center blog post said results revealed little change from previous elections in the alignments of religious groups. Evangelical Christians backed Trump by 81 per cent to 16 per cent.
Weekly churchgoers of any kind supported the president-elect by 56 per
cent to 40 per cent.