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Poll: Evangelical Democrats Matter in '08 Election

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WASHINGTON – Evangelical Democrats not only exist in this year’s presidential election, but are turning out in larger numbers than the youngest and oldest primary voters in some states, according to a new poll.

  • Voters line up to vote in the presidential primary at the Dover Baptist Church in Manakin, Va., Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2008.
    (Photo: AP Images / Steve Helber)
    Voters line up to vote in the presidential primary at the Dover Baptist Church in Manakin, Va., Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2008.

One in three white evangelical voters during the Missouri and Tennessee primaries on Feb. 5 voted for a Democratic candidate, according to the poll conducted for Faith in Public Life and the Center for American Progress Action Fund by Zogby International.

This number of white evangelicals voting for a Democratic candidate has increased since the 2004 general election, when only one in four white evangelical voters in Missouri and Tennessee supported Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts.

In Missouri, some 160,000 white evangelical Democratic voters showed up to vote at the Democratic primary. This group of voters is greater than all voters under 30, equal to all voters over age 65, and equal to all voters who said the Iraq war is the most important issue facing the country, according to the Missouri exit polls.

In Tennessee, there were 182,000 white evangelical Democratic voters – a figure equal to all African-American voters, greater than all voters over 60, and greater than all voters who said the Iraq war is the most important issue facing the country, according to the Tennessee Democratic exit polls.

Overall, 19 percent of all Democratic voters in Missouri and 29 percent of all Democratic voters in Tennessee were white evangelical.

Faith in Public Life and the Center for American Progress Action Fund had commissioned the exit polls during the Super Tuesday contests out of frustration that exit polls sponsored by the major networks have only asked the Republican primary voters whether they considered themselves “born-again or evangelical Christian.”

“In failing to ask both Republicans and Democrats if they are evangelicals, the media pollsters reinforce the false and outdated stereotype that evangelicals are only concerned with one set of issues and ignore the increasing ideological diversity of the evangelical movement,” Faith in Public Life explained.

“It’s time for the media to update their script and provide balanced coverage of the role of religion in public life,” the group urged.

The poll also found that the majority of both Democratic and Republican evangelical voters want a broader agenda that goes beyond abortion and same-sex “marriage” to include ending poverty, protecting the environment, and tackling HIV/AIDS.

Sixty-two percent of white evangelical voters in Missouri want a broader agenda (75 percent of Democratic voters and 56 percent of Republican voters). In Tennessee, 56 percent of white evangelical voters support a broader agenda (60 percent of Democratic voters and 54 percent of Republican voters).

Notably, in both states polled, more white evangelicals listed jobs and the economy as the most important issues in deciding their votes than abortion and same-sex “marriage.”

In Missouri, 30 percent of all white evangelicals ranked jobs and economy the most important issue, while 14 percent considered abortion and same-sex “marriage” the most important. Also, 12 percent chose Iraq; 11 percent, health care; 7 percent, immigration; 6 percent, terrorism; 4 percent, taxes; and 4 percent, education). Continue >>

 
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Most recent comments
  • revmick
    Wed Feb 13, 2008 10:10 am : 1 : 0 Flag

    polls - the measure of 'ifs'. Polls really reflect the opinion that the pollsters want as they know where to go to get the answers they want. Truth of the matter is that if Christians really voted Christian values things just might look a little different.

  • seedplanter
    Tue Feb 12, 2008 5:31 pm : 2 : 1 Flag

    Another problem is that people like Rush Limbaugh that are in the public's eye and profess Christ, and at the same time does not seem to have a clue what real Christians think. For example he and many others thought that Christians did not like Romney because he is a Mormon, when in reality it was because he has a voting record that is totally hostile toward Biblical Christian values.

  • seedplanter
    Tue Feb 12, 2008 5:25 pm : 0 : 0 Flag

    The more that the news media can do to build their own peculiar analysis of Christians, the less anyone even knows what a Christian is. Instead of going to mega churches to feel the churches pulse they need to go to some ordinary churches. When Christians do talk to the media elites, they need to be willing to stop slanting it in such ways that pervert them.

  • song2vs4
    Tue Feb 12, 2008 11:44 am : 3 : 1 Flag

    I don't believe most polls. Take for instance the one mentioned on this site regarding "most Americans want a Biblical leader as President." No democrat running can be classified as a Biblical leader but were told polls show evangelicals are voting democrat????????This is just one example of conflicting information that come from polls.

  • RedRyder
    Tue Feb 12, 2008 11:29 am : 1 : 0 Flag

    I was back home in MO during the primary and spoke with a few white evangelical friend. Unsolicited, they told me they cross over to vote for Hillary only b/c they thought it would give the Republicans a better chance when the election came around in Nov. I don't deny liberal christians are moving to the Dems but its not clear to me that these studies go deep enough to really capture whats going on this year. Seems like more studies are calling it wrong than in the past.

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