Politics - News Analysis

Jerry Falwell Jr. Says It’s ‘Immoral’ For Christians ‘Not to Support’ Donald Trump

In a new interview in the Washington Post Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr. says that it’s “immoral for” evangelical leaders “not to support” Donald Trump.

Falwell was asked about other faith leaders who have criticized his pro-Trump views, and he pointed to minority unemployment rates and argued that all Christians should back the president.

“It may be immoral for them not to support him, because he’s got African American employment to record highs, Hispanic employment to record highs,” Falwell replied. “They need to look at what the president did for the poor.”

He continued, “A lot of the people who criticized me, because they had a hard time stomaching supporting someone who owned casinos and strip clubs or whatever, a lot them have come around and said, “Yeah, you were right.” Some of the most prominent evangelicals in the country have said, “Jerry, we thought you were crazy, but now we understand.”

Falwell was asked if there is “there anything President Trump could do that would endanger that support from you or other evangelical leaders,” to-which the conservative activist quickly replied, “No.”

“That’s the shortest answer we’ve had so far,” the interview Joe Heim remarked.

“Only because I know that he only wants what’s best for this country, and I know anything he does, it may not be ideologically ‘conservative,’ but it’s going to be what’s best for this country, and I can’t imagine him doing anything that’s not good for the country,” Falwell added.

Falwell can imagine Jesus walking on water, but Trump doing something bad? Impossible! (Meanwhile, those of us who check Twitter in the morning find ample evidence of Trump hurting America before the Sun is up.)

After being asked if it is moral for evangelical leaders to back Trump, despite all his known and admitted sins, Falwell argued that Christians shouldn’t focus on electing moral leaders, and should instead “choose a president based on what their policies are.”

“Let’s say you decide Mitt Romney. Nobody could be a more decent human being, better family man,” he said, before bizarrely speculating that there could be bad “things that Romney has done that we just don’t know about.”

In another eyebrow-raising quote, Falwell attacked low-income people and suggested they are worthless to society.

“A poor person never gave anyone a job. A poor person never gave anybody charity, not of any real volume,” Falwell said, amid a rant about American exceptionalism.

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