Trump to reportedly meet evangelical leaders to discuss Stormy Daniels

Meeting will address concerns on how the midterms will be affected by Trump’s divisive style and alleged affairs, according to sources

Donald Trump attends service at First Presbyterian Church in Muscatine, Iowa on 24 January 2016.
Donald Trump attends service at First Presbyterian church in Muscatine, Iowa, on 24 January 2016. Photograph: Andrew Harnik/AP

Evangelical leaders are planning a meeting with Donald Trump in June following continuing developments in the scandal over his alleged affair with pornographic actor Stormy Daniels, it was reported on Friday.

Four anonymous sources told radio network NPR that the meeting was intended to address concerns about how the midterms might be affected both by the president’s divisive leadership style and his alleged sex scandals.

As well as the claims by Daniels – real name Stephanie Clifford – former Playboy model Karen McDougal has claimed an affair with Trump.

The president on Thursday denied knowing about a $130,000 payment his lawyer, Michael Cohen, made to Daniels to buy her silence.

When asked why Cohen made the payment, Trump said: “You’ll have to ask Michael Cohen. Michael is my attorney. You’ll have to ask Michael.”

The White House did not immediately respond to the Guardian’s request for comment.

Early polling suggests Daniels’ claim she had an affair with Trump before he was president has not had a substantial impact on white evangelicals’ attitudes towards Trump.

A CBS News poll held from 8 to 11 March found 70% of white evangelicals approve of Trump’s job performance. This poll was taken before Daniels detailed her sexual encounter with the president on the television news program 60 Minutes.

This poll looks exclusively at white evangelicals, omitting an increasingly powerful and diverse bloc within the community.

Evangelicals are becoming more diverse, fueled largely by an increase in young Latino members. This has led to an increasing political divide in the bloc, as these younger, non-white members are more often Democrats or independents.

Five months before the election, Trump met privately with nearly a thousand conservatives, predominantly members of the religious right, at a daylong conference in New York. The meeting was intended to brief Trump on their policy positions and also bolster support for Trump among more religious Republicans.

The proposed meeting in June would have similar intentions, the sources told NPR.

Ralph Reed, chairman of the conservative Faith and Freedom Coalition told NPR he does not expect the affair allegations to substantially reduce evangelical support for Trump in the midterms.

“If these folks don’t turn out in record numbers in 2018,” Reed said. “It’s gonna be a long night for Republicans.”