God-o-Meter

New Poll: Obama Gains Among Monthly Attenders, Younger Christians

Wednesday October 8, 2008

Categories: Barack Obama
fpl.jpgThe progressive religious group Faith in Public Life, founded after the '04 elections, is holding a conference call right now on its new polling of religious Americans, paying special attention to young evangelicals, Catholics, and other

Some key findings from the poll:

  • Monthly worship attenders swing to Obama in 2008. The greatest shift in candidate preference between 2004 and 2008 has occurred among voters who attend religious services once or twice a month, moving from 49% support for Kerry in 2004 to 60% support for Obama in 2008. McCain maintains a significant advantage among voters who attend more frequently, while Obama has a nearly identical advantage over McCain among those who attend once or twice a month or less often.
  • More Americans think Obama is friendly to religion than McCain. Forty-nine percent of Americans say Obama is friendly towards religion, while 45% say McCain is friendly towards religion. More than seven-in-ten (71%) say it is important for public officials to be comfortable talking about religious values.

 

  • Younger Catholics more strongly support Obama, abortion rights, and more active government than older Catholics. While older Catholics (age 35 and older) are split between the candidates (46% for McCain and 44% for Obama), among younger Catholics Obama leads McCain by 15 points (55% to 40%). Six-in-ten younger Catholics say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, compared to half of older Catholics. Younger Catholics are more pro-government than any other religious group, with two-thirds preferring bigger government with more services, compared to 41% support among older Catholics.

 

  • Younger white evangelicals strongly oppose abortion rights but are less conservative and more supportive of same-sex marriage than older evangelicals. Young white evangelicals are strongly opposed to abortion rights, with two-thirds saying abortion should be illegal in all or most cases. Yet, less than half (49%) of younger evangelicals identify as conservative, compared to nearly two-thirds (65%) of older evangelicals. Among young evangelicals, a majority favor either same-sex marriage (24%) or civil unions (28%), compared to a majority (61%) of older evangelicals who favor no legal recognition of gay couples' relationships.

 

  • Younger white evangelicals are more pluralistic and more supportive of active government at home and of diplomacy abroad. While less than one-third (30%) of older evangelicals say a person can be moral without believing in God, 44% of younger evangelicals affirm this idea, a 14-point gap. A majority (56%) of younger evangelicals believe diplomacy rather than military strength is the best way to ensure peace, compared to only 44% of older white evangelicals. Younger white evangelicals are also more likely than older white evangelicals to favor a bigger government offering more services, by a margin of 21 points (44% and 23% respectively).

 

  • Generation gap on same-sex marriage is large and increasing. Nearly half (46%) of young adults say gay couples should be allowed to marry, compared to only 29% of Americans overall. Over the last two years, support for same-sex marriage among young adults has jumped 9 points (from 37% to 46%), and the generation gap has nearly doubled. Support for same-sex marriage is significant among young religious Americans. Among young white mainline Protestants and Catholics, close to half (48% and 44% respectively) support same-sex marriage. Young white evangelicals are 2.5 times as likely as older evangelicals to say that gay couples should be allowed to marry (25% to 9%).

For full poll results, click here.

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Comments
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October 8, 2008 12:46 PM

You can find out more about this poll at http://www.lifenews.com/nat4403.html

The poll found 49 percent of young adult evangelicals (18-29) say abortion should be illegal in most cases while another 25 percent said it should be illegal in all cases.

That 74 percent compared with just 26 percent who say it should be legal in all cases (with 8 percent taking Obama's position) or legal in most cases (18 percent).

The survey found about 25 percent of the older evangelical voters took one of the two pro-abortion positions while 71 percent took one of the two pro-life positions.

Justasking
October 9, 2008 11:12 AM

Since same-gender marriage has an appearance of a Christian moral tone, and abortion is just plain murder, it is no wonder that evangelicals across the spectrum are caring less about what homosexuals do with their own lives, than what abortion does to an "innocent" human life.

maggie
October 14, 2008 1:27 PM

I WANTED TO TELL EVERYONE THAT BARAK IS GOING TO BE PRESIDENT KNOW DOULT ABOUT IT BUT WHAT I KNOW THAT MOST PEOPLE ARE AFRAID OF A BLACK MAN BEING THE NEXT PRESIDENT THEY ARE MORE WORRIED ABOUT THAT THEN ANYTHING AND HE GOT MY VOTE IT SAD WHEN A MAN HAS TO REGISTER 88 TIMES
TO VOTE FOR BARAK WE CAN'T LIVE THE NEXT 4 YEARS LIKE THIS

withcare
November 2, 2008 2:27 AM

I'm a white women and I not afraid for a black man being president, I think it,s about time that we have CHANGE ,ABAMA got my vote

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This blog is no longer updated and is closed for comments. We welcome your comments about politics in our Politics forums.

The God-o-Meter (pronounced Gah-DOM-meter) scientifically measures factors such as rate of God-talk, effectiveness—saying God wants a capital gains tax cut doesn't guarantee a high rating—and other top-secret criteria (Actually, the adjustment criteria are here). Click a candidate's head to get his or her latest God-o-Meter reading and blog post. And check back often. With so much happening on the campaign trail, God-o-Meter is constantly recalibrating!

God-o-Meter blogger Dan Gilgoff is Beliefnet's Politics Editor. A former political correspondent for U.S. News & World Report, he is author of The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family, and Evangelical America are Winning the Culture War.

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