
Kat
29K posts









🚨 Roughly 40–60 MILLION Christians in America are either NOT registered to vote or routinely SIT OUT midterm elections. That’s larger than the population of California. And in a country where Senate races, House seats and even presidential elections are decided by razor-thin margins, that level of non-participation is political suicide for Christians who care about faith, family, parental rights, free speech and religious liberty. According to Pew and PRRI data, Christians still make up roughly 62–66% of American adults - translating to around 160–170+ million self-identified Christians nationwide. Yet: • ~25–35% of Christian adults may not even be registered to vote (~40–60 million people) • Midterm turnout historically drops to ~46–53% nationally • Even among registered Christians, tens of millions skip “lower-stakes” elections entirely Sources: ➡️ Pew Research ➡️ PRRI ➡️ Census Voting Data ➡️ Ballotpedia ➡️ Baker Institute That means MANY Christians are unknowingly surrendering school boards, local courts, governorships, Congress and state legislatures before the fight even begins. And that’s the real battlefield. @ScottPresler @TPUSA If we can get this eBook into the hands of Christians across the country before the midterms, I genuinely believe a LOT of people would start making far more informed decisions at the ballot box. I can’t say too much publicly because I’m not allowed to, but this is solid resource material. It breaks down: • Republican vs Democrat policy positions • Religious liberty issues • Legal anchors and references • Midterm relevance • Quick-reference comparisons for Christian voters The reality is this: Most Americans don’t read 1,000-page legislation bills. Most don’t follow Supreme Court cases. Most don’t track policy shifts in education, healthcare, speech laws or parental rights. They vote based on headlines, emotions and whatever outrage is trending for 24 hours on X. That’s why informed voter education matters. Not emotional manipulation. Not celebrity endorsements. Not media narratives. Information. Because if even a SMALL percentage of those 40–60 million disengaged Christians become informed and active voters, it changes races all across America.














