Leading up to the election, LifeWay Research, which measures evangelicals by belief and includes non-whites, found that evangelicals of color sided with Hillary Clinton (62 %) nearly as strongly as
white evangelicals sided with Trump (65 %).
Pew found that 17 percent of
white evangelicals side with Clinton in this election — and 10 percent of that is mainly opposition to Donald Trump.
Not exact matches
Both groups were more likely to sympathize with both
sides in the birth control coverage debate (27 %
white evangelicals, 38 % black Protestants).
About a quarter of black Protestants (26 %) and 16 percent of
white evangelicals didn't sympathize with either
side.
Again, more black Protestants than
white evangelicals said they could see both
sides (20 % black Protestants, 12 %
white evangelicals) or neither
side (28 % black Protestants, 22 %
white evangelicals).
Nearly twice as many black Protestants (45 %) as
white evangelicals (26 %) said they could sympathize with either both
sides (14 %
white evangelicals, 19 % black Protestants) or neither
side (12 %
white evangelicals, 26 % black Protestants) in the marriage services debate.
White evangelicals were the lone group where the majority
sided with conscience of the business owner (71 %).
According to a Pew Research Center report released last year, 40 percent of American women oppose abortion in all or most circumstances, and
white evangelical Protestants are far more likely than any other religious group to
side against it.