How the Presidential Campaign Got Religion
Carson, Trump, Clinton, Biden: Everyone's talking about faith, and with widely varying results with the most religious voters.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks while attending the Foundry United Methodist Church for their Bicentennial Homecoming Celebration, in Washington, Sunday, Sept. 13, 2015. During President Bill Clinton's presidency, the Clintons worshipped and participated regularly at Foundry.
Photographer: Molly Riley/APThis article is for subscribers only.
On Sunday, Hillary Clinton stood at the pulpit of Foundry United Methodist Church, which she’d attended as first lady, and said she’d just gotten some excellent, Bible-based advice from her former minister, J. Philip Wogaman: In keeping with the reading of the day, from Romans 12, he told her, “You’ve got to be nicer to the press.”
“I certainly will take that to heart,” she promised, and the congregation laughed.