‘Trumpvangelicals’ top religion journalists’ poll

And the president himself tops the list of religion newsmakers of the year — despite his lack of church attendance and biblical literacy.

Evangelical supporters place hands on and pray with President Trump in the Oval Office of the White House. Photo courtesy of Johnnie Moore

(RNS) — For the second year in a row, President Trump and his conservative evangelical supporters topped the list of the 10 most important religion news stories of the year as compiled by the country’s largest organization of religion journalists.


RELATED: 2017: In a less religious America, conservative Christians got the president’s ear, a museum and a day in court


These so-called Trumpvangelicals are enjoying unprecedented access to the Oval Office both through Vice President Mike Pence, a conservative Christian, and an informal presidential advisory panel consisting almost entirely of conservative evangelical Christian leaders.


“Religion reporters have long recognized the role religion plays in the political sphere,” said Manya Brachear Pashman, president of Religion News Association, the organization that conducted the poll. “But after the 2016 election, it became clear to reporters and editors, regardless of their specialty, there was a lot at stake for white evangelical Christians.

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“​They are strongly represented in President Trump’s Cabinet and religious advisory body and have shaped the administration’s priorities ranging from Jerusalem to the Supreme Court to interpretations of religious liberty. We saw that play out in the form of policy shifts, public demonstrations and protests that kept us all on our toes.”


RELATED: All the president’s clergymen: A close look at Trump’s ‘unprecedented’ ties with evangelicals


Trump also took the title of Religion Newsmaker of the Year, ahead of Pope Francis, Protestant reformer Martin Luther and Alabama’s Roy Moore.

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After Trumpvangelicals, religion journalists cited the following as the most important religion stories of 2017:

  • White supremacists march in Charlottesville, Va. —  Neo-Nazis bearing anti-Semitic slogans and tiki torches are resisted by religious groups; a counterprotester is killed when one demonstrator drives his vehicle into a crowd.
  • Muslim travel ban  — The Trump administration’s travel ban on a number of majority-Muslim nations leads to airport protests, court delays and further versions of the ban. Trump promises to eradicate “radical Islamic terrorism” and retweets anti-Muslim videos.
  • Jerusalem — Trump breaks precedent in recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital while calling for continued access to Christian, Jewish and Muslim holy sites. Israeli leaders and U.S. supporters applaud while others warn that the move threatens peace efforts.
  • Atrocities against the Rohingya — Majority Buddhist clerics incite hostility as Myanmar drives more than half a million Muslim Rohingya into Bangladesh in a campaign of atrocities.

Also in the top 10 are the church shooting in Sutherland Springs, Texas; the Senate candidacy of Judge Roy Moore; the appointments of Neil Gorsuch and other conservative judges; the protests of National Football League players, some citing their Christian faith; and the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation.

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The Supreme Court’s consideration of religious liberty and free speech in the Masterpiece Cakeshop case was just edged out of the top 10 to the 11th spot.


The Religion News Association, which draws members from news media both in the U.S. and abroad, has polled its members at year’s end for decades.

(The Religion News Association and Religion News Service both fall under the auspices of the Religion News Foundation, a secular educational and charitable 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.)

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