Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Society|Thu, Oct. 02 2008 02:51 PM EDT

Analysis: America's 12 Religious Voting Blocs

By Jennifer Riley|Christian Post Reporter

Whether one’s religious or not in this election cycle, one trend that is seen across the 12 tribes of American politics is that moral issues have become dramatically less important than in previous years, a newly released survey found.

From members of the religious right to those in the secular bloc, the eyes of all American voters are focused on the country’s economic situation, according to the 2008 edition of the Twelve Tribes of American Politics by John Green of the Bliss Institute at University of Akron and Beliefnet.com.

Only 13 percent of American voters listed social issues as their top priority this year - half the number that did so in the summer of 2004.

By comparison, 61 percent of Americans instead listed the economy as the most important issue this election year, a dramatic increase, compared to 32 percent four years ago, according to the Twelve Tribes survey.

The 2008 Twelve Tribes survey, conducted from June to August this year, divided American voters into 12 groups formed around similarities in religious beliefs and practices. The survey seeks to be more specific than normal political polls that mostly only divide voters into two groups – the Religious Right and Everyone Else.

Voters were divided into the following tribes: The Religious Right, Heartland Culture Warriors, Moderate Evangelicals, White Bread Protestants, Convertible Catholics, The Religious Left, Spiritual but Not Religious, Seculars, Latinos, Jews, Muslims & Other Faiths, and Black Protestants.

The survey found that the Religious Right, which makes up 12.9 percent of the voting-age population, is still the group that cares the most about cultural issues (36 percent compared to 13 percent nationally), but has upgraded economics to higher priority.

Now, 42 percent of the Religious Right list the economy as the top issue, compared to 18 percent in 2004.

However, this group’s position on social issues remains virtually unchanged since 2004, with 83 percent saying they are pro-life and 86 percent supporting only traditional marriage.

According to the survey, 71 percent of the Religious Right supports Republican John McCain, 19 percent back Democrat Barack Obama, and 11 percent remain undecided.

Meanwhile, Moderate Evangelicals, or white evangelical Protestants who hold less orthodox religious beliefs, were found to be highly concerned about economic issues. Two-thirds of this group said the economy was their greatest concern in this election, nearly a 30 percentage point increase over 2004.

Only 10 percent of this group said social issues are the most important in this election.

Voters in this bloc, which according to the survey includes Pastors Rick Warren, Joel Osteen and Joel Hunter, prefer McCain over Obama by a 20 percentage point margin (47 percent to 27 percent).

Then there is the Religious Left, which makes up 12.7 percent of the voting-age population. This group is made up of theologically liberal Catholics, mainline and evangelical Protestants.

An overwhelming majority of this group says the economy is their top political concern. They are also the group most focused on foreign policy. Two-thirds of them say the war in Iraq was unjustified. Continue »

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  • Mon Oct 13, 2008 8:19 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Did Obama support the murder of Christians in Kenya? Aparently he raised $1 million dollars to his uncle who did.

  • Fri Oct 03, 2008 12:34 am Agree: 4   Disagree: 0

    America is in trouble when the priority of the pocketbook takes over the priority of protecting the pro-life ethic.

    When the godly restraint of evil in this land is gradually peeled away, there's no holding back the righteous judgment by God of this nation.

    The election of a Democratic president, Democratic Senate, and Democratic House will surely plunge this country into greater moral chaos and decay.

    All the while the remnant of the religious right's restraining influence will all but disappear on the public front.

    Be forewarned, compromising Christians & seculars, God's judgment won't be pretty.

  • Fri Oct 03, 2008 12:26 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    It's interesting how the "seculars" can be counted as part of the 12 religious voting blocs. Whatever happened to the divide between the sacred and the secular?

  • Thu Oct 02, 2008 3:56 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    For the record, any inference about my voting preference that is derived from my "bloc" might be misleading. I am not endorsing a candidate.

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