During the final weeks of his 2024 presidential campaign, GOP nominee Donald Trump has ramped up his outreach to Mormons.
The Latter-Day Saints for Trump website debuted on October 7, and Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) has been a staunch Trump supporter — although Utah's other GOP U.S. senator, Mitt Romney (a Mormon), has been a vocal critic of the former president.
But according to The Atlantic's McKay Coppins, the "Mormons for Trump" effort has been a "comedy of errors."
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The website, according to Coppins, got off to a rocky start when it featured an image of Church of Latter-Day Saints President Russell M. Nelson — and had to remove it because they didn't have his permission to use the photo.
"A few days later, users on X discovered a page on the Trump-campaign website selling Mormon-branded merch — including Latter-Day Saints for Trump coffee mugs ($25) and koozies (two for $15)," Coppins explains. "When people pointed out that Mormons somewhat famously don't drink coffee or alcohol, the campaign hastily rebranded the merch, and a social-media pile-on ensued."
The Trump campaign's Mormon outreach, according to Coppins, has shown an "odd indifference to Latter-Day Saint religious practice."
"A canvassing event in Nevada, for example, was held the same weekend as General Conference, a semiannual series of Church broadcasts in which senior leaders deliver sermons and spiritual counsel," Coppins explains. "The timing was a 'challenge,' admitted the Utah GOP chair, who helped organize the event. And when Trump held a rally in Prescott, Arizona, with an array of MAGA-Mormon luminaries — including Sen. Mike Lee of Utah and the right-wing media personality Glenn Beck — it took place on a Sunday, which Latter-day Saints traditionally set apart for worship, service, and rest, not political events."
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Rob Taber, national director of Latter-Day Saints for Harris-Walz, slammed the "sheer incompetence" of Latter-Day Saints for Trump.
Taber told The Atlantic, "They're used to being able to count on the LDS vote to be the door-knockers and the foot soldiers of the Republican Party. Actually having to engage in persuasion is a little bit new to them."
Read The Atlantic's full report at this link (subscription required).
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