For example, there are Evangelicals who voted for Trump despite despising him as a human being because they're single issue voters who knew Trump would pick anti-abortion justices. Speaking of, while I'd generally say that the right was more unified behind Trump than the left is behind Biden, there's some splintering going on within the Evangelical cohort that may become problematic for Republicans moving forward. Or, well, splintering isn't the best way to characterize it, but the demographics of born-again Christians are changing in a way that's causing more political diversity among Evangelicals. In recent years,
blacks have begun to represent a larger portion of Evangelicals, and if this trend persists over the next 20 years, the GOP is either going to have to find a more secular base, or modify those of its planks that are less appealing to black voters. Maybe they'll be able to use trannies as a wedge issue-- black people aren't nearly as fond of trannies as Twitter would like you to believe-- or maybe the tranny trend will end before it can be capitalized upon in that way. We'll just have to wait and see.