Long a key group in Republican politics, white evangelical Christians once again turned out in force in the 2016 GOP presidential primaries and caucuses. But a deep dive into data from NBC News Exit Polls fielded throughout the nation this year—and comparisons with exit polls conducted in 2008 and 2012—show that white evangelicals lacked a distinctive leader for their cause for the first time in three election cycles.
White evangelicals did not lack for numbers among Republican voters in 2016; exit polls show that this important bloc made up 48 percent of the GOP electorate. That number was exactly the same among 2012 GOP primary and caucus voters—and sharply up from 2008, when white evangelicals composed just slightly more than a third (37 percent) of the Republican primary and caucus vote.
NBC News Exit Poll Desk









