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Donald Trump taught America a great lesson. He showed that this nation has a huge number of racist, sexist, jingoist, gay-hating, Muslim-hating, Hispanic-hating bigotsโ€”those Hillary Clinton called a โ€œbasket of deplorables.โ€ Trump attracted them by millions through his endless attacks on Blacks and other People of Color. Deplorables clung to him to the bitter end. Now that Trump is heading for eventual oblivion, where will they go?

Many of the deplorables are White evangelicals. Sociologist Robert Jones, head of the Public Religion Research Institute, says they are the most prejudiced group in the United States.

In his latest book, โ€œWhite Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity,โ€ Jones asserts that White churches have always been at the heart of racism, helping lock it into the culture. He says born-again Whites display bigotry in many different ways.

For example, they are far more likely to shrug when White police kill unarmed Black men, dismissing it as โ€œisolated incidents.โ€ And they generally say the Confederate flag is โ€œmore a symbol of southern pride than of racism.โ€

In contrast, young Americans who shun religion tend to feel greater compassion and understanding. They strongly agree when PRRI interviewers recite this statement: โ€œGenerations of slavery and discrimination have created conditions that make it difficult for Blacks to work their way out of the lower class.โ€ But fundamentalist Whites donโ€™t.

As chief researcher, Jones created a โ€œracism indexโ€ to identify bigotry. White evangelicals scored worst at 78%, while irreligious Whites rated 42%. Jones told CNN:

โ€œPresident Trump, who has put White supremacy front and center, has brought these issues from just barely below the surface into plain viewโ€ฆ. White Christians have inherited a worldview that has Christians on top of other religions, men over women, Whites over Blacks.โ€

Trump has been the champion of the deplorables. He showed everyone how large their cohort is in America. Presumably, they wonโ€™t vanish. Where will they go after the โ€œKing of Deplorablesโ€ is gone? I hope they slink downward in shame.

After any election, itโ€™s easy to look back and count various groups of voters who clinched victory. For four decades, researchers have confirmed how White evangelicals secured Republican wins. Now, in the wake of the Biden-Harris triumph, itโ€™s obvious that Democrats couldnโ€™t have won without Black votes, or Hispanic ones, or labor union ones, etc.

Or โ€œnones.โ€

Educated, intelligent, young adults who say their religion is โ€œnoneโ€ generally hold compassionate, progressive values: favoring womenโ€™s right to choose, supporting gay marriage, advocating climate control, urging low-cost college, wanting universal medical care as a human right for all, backing sex education and the public โ€œsafety netโ€ that protects less-privileged people, etc.

These liberals naturally lean to the Democratic Party and have become the largest faith group in its base. Unfortunately, they vote at lower ratesโ€”but several freethought organizations mobilized efforts to rouse their democratic instincts.

The VoteCast exit poll of the Associated Press on election day found that โ€œnonesโ€ favored Biden-Harris by a whopping margin of 72 percent to 26 percent. They were bold progressives. In contrast, White evangelicals chose Trump by an overwhelming 82 percent, the same as in 2016. Maybe they tipped some states to the GOP, causing early Democratic disappointment on election night. But religion has shriveled so much in America that they couldnโ€™t tip the whole nation. Thatโ€™s my guess.

I hope research in the coming months will pinpoint how much โ€œnonesโ€ were decisive in swinging the 2020 election.

James Haught, writes commentary and is syndicated by PeaceVoice.