Hello Bette the Red, Your statement is horribly over-simplified and terribly unfair. First, 16% of white evangelical Christians voted for Hilary Clinton. So in a single sentence, you have dumped millions of thoughtful, intelligent, Caucasian evangelical Christians into the same pot as those who voted for Donald Trump. That is simply unfair. Second, exit polls show 51% of the evangelical white Christian voters indicated they were voting against Hilary Clinton, not for Donald Trump. So there was a huge protest vote element within that demographic group. From what I have read, many in white evangelical Christians declared they were horribly conflicted, but held their noses and voted for Trump as a protest against the democratic candidate. Why did this demographic vote against Hilary Clinton? I don't know. It may have had something to do with the Democratic National Committee jigging the primary campaign in favour of their chosen candidate, rather than let two strong candidates fight it out on a level playing field. For a whole lot of Americans that just stunk. But I'm getting off topic. Third, the influence of white Evangelical Christian voters in crucial swing states is greatly exaggerated. In Florida, only 24.6% of the population is made up of white evangelical Christians. In Wisconsin, the number is 22.5%. In Massachusetts only 10.6%. Fourth: Candidate Clinton's supporters didn't show up the way candidate Trump's did. Votes for Hilary Clinton went down among both Hispanics and African Americans. Surprisingly, 29% of Hispanic Americans voted for Trump, an increase of 2% over Mitt Romney four years ago. Of course all this is terribly nuanced. I should be just wringing my hands and "sucking it up" because someone made a blanket statement that smeared millions of people who are innocent of the slur.