
McKay Coppins
Staff writer at The Atlantic, political journalist, and author of The Wilderness and Romney: A Reckoning; he has also received awards for coverage of the Trump presidency and religion journalism.
Political Neutrality Leaves Immigration Advocacy Threshold Unresolved
Latter-day Saint apostle Clark Gilbert argues that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints should remain politically neutral on immigration while serving members affected by enforcement through legal aid, education, humanitarian assistance and local ministry. At the Faith Angle Forum, journalists pressed him on whether care within the existing system is enough when detention and deportation threaten congregations. Gilbert defended neutrality as protection against partisan capture but did not identify when public opposition to government policy would be required.
Partisan Identity Is Reshaping Religious Belief and Political Mobilization
University of Notre Dame political scientist David Campbell argues that religion and politics shape each other: partisan identity can drive changes in religious affiliation, moral judgment, and the meaning Americans attach to labels such as Christian or secular. In a Faith Angle Forum discussion with New York Times *Believing* newsletter writer Lauren Jackson, he says Republican appeals to threatened Christian identity remain potent but limited, while Jackson hears from religiously and politically unsettled readers seeking belonging, hope, and a public language that does not reduce faith to a voting bloc.