fbpx
×

Log into your account

We have changed software providers for our subscription database. Old login credentials will no longer work. Please click the "Register" link below to create a new account. If you do not know your new account number you can contact [email protected]
Poll: Americans want religious presidents
Nicole Neroulias, Religion News Service
July 29, 2011
4 MIN READ TIME

Poll: Americans want religious presidents

Poll: Americans want religious presidents
Nicole Neroulias, Religion News Service
July 29, 2011

Americans want their presidents to be religious, but many have

trouble identifying the faiths of President Obama and leading GOP contenders

Mitt Romney and Rep. Michele Bachmann, according to a new poll released July 25.

A majority of Americans (56 percent) say it’s important for a candidate to have

strong beliefs, even if those beliefs differ from their own, according to the

poll conducted by Public Religion Research Institute in partnership with

Religion News Service.

Yet the religious groups most firmly behind this point — white evangelicals (73

percent) and ethnic minority Christians (74 percent) — often falter when asked

about politicians’ religions.

For instance, just 44 percent of white evangelicals know that Romney is a

Mormon. At the same time, more than 8 in 10 evangelicals say Mormon religious

beliefs greatly differ from their own.

Even fewer ethnic minority Christians (21 percent) knew Romney’s religion. And

only one in three Americans can correctly identify Obama’s Christian faith.

Consistent with previous polls, about one in five (18 percent) Americans think

Obama is Muslim.

Daniel Cox, the research director at PRRI, said Romney’s Mormonism could be a

liability: of people who say Mormon beliefs are significantly different than

their own, Obama currently leads Romney, 49 percent to 28 percent.

“Because views about the Mormon faith are tied to political support, Romney

will need to address these perceptions as Americans learn more about him during

the campaign,” Cox said.

Still, observers cautioned that perceptions can change over time, or even take

a back seat to other factors like party loyalty or pocketbook concerns. And for

Republicans, simply beating Obama could be the most important factor of all.

White evangelicals “are going to be more likely to vote Republican, even if the

party nominates someone who isn’t known for strong faith commitments,” said Gary

Scott Smith, an expert on presidential religions at Grove

City College in Pennsylvania.

“And if they don’t recognize that Romney’s a Mormon by now, then you wonder how

attuned they are to politics anyway.”

In other findings:

  • Just four in 10 Americans can correctly identify Romney’s religion; 46

    percent say they don’t know. When asked Obama’s religious beliefs, a full 40

    percent of Americans say they didn’t know.

  • White evangelicals are the group most likely to say they don’t know what

    Bachmann’s beliefs are (51 percent), even though she attends a Baptist church,

    and only 35 percent say she has similar religious beliefs to them.

  • At a little more than 70 percent, Republicans and Tea Party members are

    significantly more likely than Democrats (51 percent) to say it’s important for

    a presidential candidate to have strong religious beliefs. Tea Party members

    (46 percent) are even more likely than

    Republicans as a whole (38 percent) to say it is “very” important for a candidate

    to have strong religious beliefs.

  • People who say it is important for a candidate to have strong religious

    beliefs tend to prefer Romney to Obama, 43 percent to 36 percent, or Bachmann

    over Obama, 44 percent to 38 percent, in head-to-head matchups.

Americans have traditionally elected presidents who use religious language and

seek divine guidance, especially when grappling with the moral conflicts of the

day, provided that their beliefs are relatively mainstream and don’t conflict

with national security, Smith said.

The appeal of a visibly devout candidate, even if those beliefs aren’t actually

understood, also reflects some mistrust of our political system, said Mark

Silk, a professor of religion in public life at Trinity

College in Hartford,

Conn.

“There’s a suspicion of a strong central government — you can see that in the

Tea Party — and Americans think that more religious leaders are less likely to

abuse the people,” he said.

Obama has walked a careful line on his religious beliefs — talking openly about

“glory(ing) in the promise of redemption in the Resurrection,” for example, but

also trying not to alienate secular voters. If, after four years, six in 10

Americans still don’t know he’s a Christian, there may be little he can do to

change the perception.

Bachmann, however, may have an opportunity to gain votes among fellow

evangelicals by continuing to publicize her religious convictions, while Romney

may be better off keeping undecided voters focused away from his Mormon faith,

Silk said.

The PRRI/RNS Religion News Survey was based on telephone interviews of 1,012 U.S.

adults between July 14 and 17. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus

3 percentage points.