This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2016, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

The Hillary Clinton campaign is making another push at attracting Mormon voters with a new web video released as several top GOP officials and the LDS Church-owned newspaper in Utah are distancing themselves from Republican nominee Donald Trump.

The new video, featuring a bipartisan group of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is aimed at showing Clinton is more amenable to the interests of Mormons than Trump, whose remarks about women and minorities have dogged his presidential bid.

Clinton supporters in the video read excerpts from her book, "It Takes A Village," talking about the importance of raising children to be part of their community and about religious and political freedoms and immigrants.

"I'm often asked what I would like to see happen above all else in our country and in our world," the supporters say, taking turns with various lines. "There are so many things to pray for, so many things to work for. But certainly my answer would be a world in which all children are loved and cared for — first by the families into which they are born, and then by all of us who are linked to them and to one another."

The Clinton campaign previously announced a group called Mormons for Hillary, which will focus on convincing family, friends and neighbors that they should back the Democratic nominee.

Trump, who was leading in Utah polls this year but at numbers far below his predecessors in presidential election years, faces a more daunting task at winning the White House after a tape emerged Friday showing him bragging about lurid actions with women.

Gov. Gary Herbert, Rep. Jason Chaffetz and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman pulled their support of Trump after the audio was released, and the Deseret News, owned by the LDS Church, published an editorial saying Trump was unfit for the presidency.