Politics - News Analysis

Sarah Huckabee Sanders Says She Overlooks Trump’s ‘Immorality’ By Focusing On His ‘Unconventionality’

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders reconciles her traditional Christian beliefs with Donald Trump’s sometimes-not-so-Christian tendencies by separating church and state. “I’m not going to my office expecting it to be my church,” she told The New Yorker.

Sanders fell into the press secretary job in 2017 when tumultuous staffing issues left the post open; as one former adviser said, “There wasn’t anybody else.”

She was reportedly brought on to Team Trump as a way to link the president to evangelicals and suburban women.

Though she rarely hints at her personal views on Trump’s policy decisions, she is steadfastly loyal to the president’s message, functioning at once as “the wall” Trump built and the “battering ram” fighting through his myriad crises. Her views or style can sometimes diverge from what The New Yorker calls Trump’s “immorality,” by evangelical standards, but she focuses on the positive aspects of his “unconventionality.” Someone close to her said that she views Trump’s bombastic and uncompromising approach as effective, if unsavory.

From The New Yorker:

“I’m not going to my office expecting it to be my church,” [Sanders] answered. “Frankly, if people of faith don’t get involved in the dirty process, then you’re missing the entire point of what we’re called to do. You’re not called to go into the places where everyone already thinks like you and is a believer — you have to go onto a stage where they’re not.” She went on, “You have to take that message into the darkest places, and the dirtiest places, and the most tainted and dysfunctional places. If you can influence even one person, that’s what you’re supposed to do.” (Later, Sanders said that she was speaking broadly, about her social duty as a Christian and not about the White House.)

I said a lot of Americans feel that the person who needs the most help is Trump.

“We all need help,” she said. “That’s the whole basis of Christianity. No one is perfect. We are all sinners.” I asked her if she considered Trump racist. She said no.

During official press briefings, Sanders can’t say anything “even somewhat nuanced” about Trump, a source said — praise only. However, behind the scenes, reporters say she is much less confrontational and is often quite helpful.

The New Yorker reports that she stays aggressive on camera because it pleases Trump and helps him push his claims of “fake news.” Sanders says she likes the “nervous adrenaline” that comes with the job. “The odds are stacked against you,” she said of entering the briefing room to face upwards of 50 reporters. “I like it, though.”

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