Initial reports suggest that four out of five white
evangelical Christians
voted for Trump, continuing their
pattern of support for the Republican candidate in US presidential elections since the 1980s.
Yet, Gold's generation represents one exception to the
pattern; unlike any other age group, millennial
evangelical women were more likely than their male counterparts to
vote for Trump, according to the Cooperative Congressional Election Study (CCES) provided to CT by Ryan Burge, politics researcher and blogger for the site Religion in Public.