Last Saturday, Donald Trump promised in a Truth Social post, “we will demolish the Deep State, we will expel the warmongers from our government, we will drive out the globalists, we will cast out the Communists, Marxists, and Fascists, we will throw off the sick political class that hates our Country, we will rout the Fake News Media, we will evict Joe Biden from the White House, and we will FINISH THE JOB ONCE AND FOR ALL!” The 2024 election, he wrote, “is our final battle.”
Trump’s use of “cast out” will provoke amens from his most loyal constituency: white evangelicals. That sort of term is commonly used by evangelicals, Pentecostals and charismatic Christians to describe the exorcism of demons. That could be in a personal situation, say, to cast out the “demon” of homosexuality from a family member, or on a bigger stage, to cast out demons, in the form of political adversaries, from Washington.
When Trump says “Communists, Marxists, and Fascists,” he doesn’t mean actual communists or fascists. He means Democrats.
Trump knows that these communities remain steeped in the fervent, right-wing anti-communism of the Cold War era, in which communism, socialism, and Marxism were deemed not only anti-American, but anti-Christian. After the fall of communism, leading figures in the movement reshaped their McCarthyist arguments to falsely accuse any liberal or progressive, such as former President Barack Obama and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, of being a communist, socialist and/or Marxist.
So when Trump says “Communists, Marxists, and Fascists,” he doesn’t mean actual communists or fascists. He means Democrats.
Conspiracy theories about Democrats’ supposed secret communist ties abound on the Christian right. David Noebel, a leading figure in developing curricula to teach evangelicals about the supposed clash between the “Christian worldview” and “secular humanism” and “Marxism-Leninism,” wrote in 2010 that “most Americans are totally unaware that the US House of Representatives crawls with a large, well-organized assembly of Socialist organizations.” These organizations, he claims, “quite literally comprise a Socialist Red Army within the very contours of the House of Representatives.” Even before Ted Cruz became a U.S. senator, he peddled the similarly laughable conspiracy theory that Obama learned how to be a communist at Harvard Law School, because “there were more self-declared communists on the Harvard faculty than there were Republicans.”
Trump’s evangelical base believes God ordained America as a Christian nation, that the Christian nation is under attack by internal, satanic enemies (including the so-called communists), and that Christian patriots must wage “spiritual warfare” against these demonic forces to restore the America God intended. Many of them also believe that God anointed Trump to save America at this crucial time in its history.
Since his first term, Trump’s evangelical allies have been laying the groundwork to transform this supposedly spiritual battlefield into a political one. At a 2019 National Day of Prayer event in the Rose Garden, Trump’s spiritual adviser Paula White said the White House was “holy ground,” that Trump was on an assignment from God, and prayed to “scatter” every “demonic network.”








