The Evangelical Vote: How Big Is It Really?

Polling data are muddled by issues of how to define this key voting bloc

September 24, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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Is it reasonable to think that Barack Obama can woo enough evangelicals away from the Republican Party to pull off victories in some of the crucial battleground states?

The answer might depend on which polls you are looking at.

Evangelicals have been recognized as pivotal players in the American political landscape at least since the election of President Jimmy Carter. As a vital component of the values voter bloc, along with conservative Roman Catholics, they are even credited with making the crucial difference in the 2004 presidential race.

But assessing the precise role of evangelicals in elections is not easy, a new study by two sociologists shows, because analysts and pollsters use quite different definitions to identify these voters and their movement. Noting that claims about the size and characteristics of American evangelicals are "often inconsistent, even contradictory," Michael Lindsay, a professor at Rice University, and Conrad Hackett, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Texas, say that estimates of the adult evangelical population have ranged from as small as 7 percent of the total adult population to as large as 47 percent.

And that, as they say in the gambling world, is a pretty big point spread.

So should we simply ignore all that polling data about evangelicals? No, the two authors say, but we should be aware of how different types of polls go about studying them.

To clarify matters, Lindsay and Hackett explain the three distinct ways in which leading national polls do so. As used in the General Social Survey, denominational affiliation determines evangelicals through membership in Protestant denominations that are designated as evangelical (which is often used as a synonym for fundamentalist or traditionalist and is distinguished from the moderate and liberal categories of denominations).

This approach depends, of course, on which denominations you label evangelical, and here significant disagreements arise. Some methods include historically African-American Protestant denominations; others do not. So while the former estimate that about 29 percent of the population is evangelical, the latter put the number at around 25 percent.

The Gallup Organization and the Pew Research Center use self-classification as their approach, asking respondents if they call themselves evangelical or born-again Christians. The big uncertainty about this technique is whether born-again and evangelical should be considered roughly synonymous, since the former is largely a matter of experience, and the latter is largely a matter of specific beliefs (such as having a responsibility to share one's faith with non-Christians).

The self-classification approach opens the evangelical category to Catholics and Orthodox Christians as well as to Protestants. Gallup's estimates of the portion of the adult population that is evangelical have ranged from 35 percent in 1976 to a whopping 47 percent in 1998; last year's estimate was 41 percent.

The most restrictive approach, used most notably by the Barna Research Group, takes specific religious beliefs as the determinant of religious identity. Barna, like Gallup, allows non-Protestants to be counted as evangelicals, but the beliefs are so precisely delineated that only 2 percent of Catholics make it into this category (compared with 16 percent of Catholics in the Gallup Poll).

Overall, Barna finds that only 7 percent of the adult population is evangelical.

Knowing what goes into the making of these different polls will not allow you to predict whether Obama will, or will not, be able to make sufficient inroads into the evangelical voting bloc in the coming election. But it is reasonable to expect that he will win more votes from those evangelicals identified as such by Pew and Gallup than those identified as such by Barna.

Why? Because evangelicals defined by specific beliefs tend to be more conservative than those defined by self-classification.

Drawing on data from the 1998 General Social Survey, which had questions using the three ways of defining evangelicals, Lindsay and Hackett found that 53 percent of those determined by self-classification were Republican compared with 63 percent of those determined by specific beliefs. Among other things, that might explain why a recent Barna poll found Obama leading in 18 of 19 American faith communities, the only exception being the very restrictively defined evangelical community.

Only by the strictest of definitions, it seems, do the Republicans have a tight hold on evangelical voters.

Tags:
Christianity,
evangelicals,
2008 presidential election,
religion,
voters

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Michael wants abortion clinics closed, but they help us taxpayers. I've paid taxes since 1941 and dislike being taxed to subsidize unmarried religious poor moms who refuse to abort. I want those dads to suffer the cost & work of parenthood. It costs $500,000 to give taxpaid welfare, ADC, health care, food stamps & subsidized housing to one such mom and her child to the age of 18. But abortion is cheap. To ten weeks, an abortion costs less thah $800. Subtract that from a half-million, and we taxpayers are saved $499,200. So let's have taxpaid abortions and at last bring down the huge cost of welfare for parasitic unwed religious moms who expect God (us) to pay their way.

auradawn veirs of CA 6:10PM March 20, 2010

Michael wants abortion clinics closed, but they help us taxpayers. I've paid taxes since 1941 and dislike being taxed to subsidize unmarried religious poor moms who refuse to abort. I want those dads to suffer the cost & work of parenthood. It costs $500,000 to give taxpaid welfare, ADC, health care, food stamps & subsidized housing to one such mom and her child to the age of 18. But abortion is cheap. To ten weeks, an abortion costs less thah $800. Subtract that from a half-million, and we taxpayers are saved $499,200. So let's have taxpaid abortions and at last bring down the huge cost of welfare for parasitic unwed religious moms who expect God (us) to pay their way.

auradawn veirs of CA 6:09PM March 20, 2010

Issues we have in the world today.

Food shortages (Safe ,chemical free, food)

Water clean, safe

global climate issues. the air we breathe

What produces a terrorist? could it not be the children who want to survive as much as you do?

Think of it ..right now 5 1/2 million deaths in the congo.

Disease, Famine, more extreme global disturbance

Life is not all about money!! Is it?

Suddenly the money is gone. Did the poor people cause the rich to lose their

money?

Remember the parable of the loaves and the fishes. Give and to you shall be given.

Do not fear. Remember what so ever you do unto one of the least .. you do unto yourself also.

Did your mother not share her being and body and self so you would live?

Surely she did. Or you would not be here.

The sharing the wealth you speak about is meant for the extremely wealthy who can afford to share. The top 1 to 2 %.

The Warren Buffets and Bill Gates who are giving vast sums of money away as they do not need all off it.

I lived through the great depression. I was the last of nine children. I remember having one orange for christmas.

As george washington said during the bleakest of times . We will all hang together or we will die together. We have always sacrificed together. I grew up before antibiotics, when tuberculosis, measles, polio, diptheria, whooping cough

raged through our country. Remember the life you save may be your own.

Or do you think you can eat and drink and breathe money

Those who have fought sacrificed and died for you. They gave their LIfe! Can we not spare a DIME?

anna Cook of CA 12:48PM November 03, 2008

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