When it comes to politics, not all on the "Religious Right" are Christians in the biblical sense of being born again. Even less would be in the Evangelical camp. There is quite an assortment, including the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) Mormons and others. So, being conservative and a Christian are not necessarily synonymous. Similarly, being an Evangelical doesn't necessarily mean being a Conservative or one who has their worldview shaped by the Scriptures instead of trying to shape the Scriptures to conform to their worldview. These are important distinctions to make for those who read Jon Harris's Federalist article, "How Trump’s Victory Affects The Civil War In Evangelicalism." The article isn't really as much about Trump as it is about celebrity pastors and leaders like David Platt and Russell Moore who desire to maintain the identification of Evangelicals while working hard to push the church to the Progressive left:
“Over the past decade, a clear political divide has emerged within American evangelical Christianity. Institutional leaders have increasingly aligned their organizations with the leftist ruling class, while many in the pews maintain more conservative views and resist these shifts. Trump’s recent victory has intensified this balancing act for leaders and further deepened the divide within the movement.
“Signaling approval for the left’s cultural dominance while maintaining Religious Right credentials has never been easy. In the 2010s, the strategy was to expand the definition of pro-life to include issues such as racial justice and left-leaning immigration policies. To pick one example among many: McLean Bible Church Pastor David Platt wrote positively, in his 2020 book Before You Vote, about a Christian who cared about the life issue but would not vote for a Republican pro-life candidate. This is the same D.C. beltway pastor who shut down his church for Covid-19 and marched and spoke at a Black Lives Matter-style protest that same year. Platt, along with many evangelical leaders, gave the impression that Christians were expected to push the needle left on a range of issues while pushing right was, at the very least, optional.
“Platt’s signaling against Trump — when he essentially apologized to his congregation for the “hurt” he may have caused related to issues like “racial division and injustice” after praying for Trump — was only possible as long as theoretical lip service was paid to pro-life and pro-family issues. This allowed evangelical elites to project an image of transcending the political divide, when they were in fact choosing a side.”
So far, it seems that "many in the pews maintain more conservative views and resist these shifts" in spite of the pressure from celebrity leaders to embrace Progressivism. How long that will last is anybody's guess.
https://mailchi.mp/09bad725e3b6/why-christians-need-to-talk-about-video-games?e=169825fd77