As CEOs criticize President Donald Trump en masse for his response to the white supremacist violence at last weekend’s “Unite the Right” rally, religious leaders have held steady in their support for the president.

CEOs from Merck, Blackwater, General Electric and now Aetna have all withdrawn their support or outright condemned the president for failing to properly address the white supremacists who, at times, issued Nazi salutes in his name at the Charlottesville rally.

CNBC Now ✔ @CNBCnow
JUST IN: Aetna CEO says he is “ashamed of our President’s behavior and comments” after Charlottesville http://cnb.cx/2vEasnM
1:34 PM – Aug 16, 2017
39 39 Replies 337 337 Retweets 483 483 likes
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While captains of industry line up to criticize Trump, however, religious leaders have, at best, turned a blind eye to the bigotry the president fails to condemn.

16 Aug
Jack Jenkins ✔ @jackmjenkins
Replying to @jackmjenkins
Trump evangelical board member James Robison has posted a prayer that is none-too-subtlety about Charlottesville. 1/ https://twitter.com/revjamesrobison/status/897853404000784384 …

Jack Jenkins ✔ @jackmjenkins
NEW: Johnnie Moore, a key organizer of Trump faith advisors, issues firm statement saying he will NOT stop advising the White House. https://twitter.com/JohnnieM/status/897914778793857025 …
1:33 PM – Aug 16, 2017
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