- Feb 5, 2002
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Three‑quarters of Evangelical Christian voters say they are concerned about the Trump administration's planned cuts to foreign assistance, as a nationwide survey released this week suggests that reductions in overseas aid are the foremost worry for Evangelicals during the Trump administration's first 100 days.
The online survey of over 1,000 Christian likely voters across the United States was commissioned by the progressive National Latino Evangelical Coalition and conducted by the research firm LSG from April 8 to 15. The study had a 3-percentage-point error margin and balanced participants by denomination, age, race, party affiliation and income.
About 76% of self‑identified Evangelicals — a largely Republican voting bloc — expressed concern with the drastic cuts to the foreign aid budget, citing fears it could expose fellow Christians abroad to greater persecution, harm American farmers and contribute to preventable deaths globally.
Continued below.
www.christianpost.com
The online survey of over 1,000 Christian likely voters across the United States was commissioned by the progressive National Latino Evangelical Coalition and conducted by the research firm LSG from April 8 to 15. The study had a 3-percentage-point error margin and balanced participants by denomination, age, race, party affiliation and income.
About 76% of self‑identified Evangelicals — a largely Republican voting bloc — expressed concern with the drastic cuts to the foreign aid budget, citing fears it could expose fellow Christians abroad to greater persecution, harm American farmers and contribute to preventable deaths globally.
Continued below.
Three-quarters of Evangelicals concerned about Trump's foreign aid cuts, plans for Medicaid: poll
Three quarters of Evangelical Christian voters say they are concerned about the Trump administration s planned cuts to foreign assistance, as a nationwide survey released this week suggests that