Study: Christians Leaving the Republican Party

Share:

The Barna Group released a study this week that found Christians, who in recent years have been considered the most reliable Republican voting block, are now more likely to vote for a Democratic candidate in the upcoming November elections.

The report found that social concerns, such as abortion and the protection of marriage, are not the only issues that are factoring into evangelical voter decisions.

“We have a greater proportion of faith-driven voters who are concerned about issues that are often thought of as ‘liberal’ social policy concerns, such as poverty and health care,” said Barna Group founder George Barna.

If the presidential elections were held today, the study found 40 percent of born-again believers would vote for a Democratic candidate and 29 percent would choose a Republican. The survey indicated 28 percent remain undecided.In choosing specific candidates, the study found that Hillary Clinton garnered the highest percentage of the vote with 20 percent, Barack Obama came in with 18 percent and Mike Huckabee captured 12 percent—the highest percentage of all the Republican candidates. None of the other candidates reached the double-digit percentile.

These numbers sharply contrast the 62 percent of the evangelical voters who sided with President George W. Bush just four years ago.

“In recent elections, the faith vote sided with the Republican candidate early in the race, allowing those candidates to focus on winning over swing votes,” Barna said. “In this year’s contest, however, the faith vote cannot be taken for granted.”

A recent article by The New York Times found that evangelical Democrats have not been tracked by exit polls.

This disparity is seen in the Democratic exit poll questionnaires, which largely do not ask the religious affiliation of Democratic voters.

Yet the vast majority of Republican exit poll questionnaires not only ask the religious affiliation of the voters but also the amount of times he or she attends a church service and whether on not he or she considers themselves a born-again or evangelical Christian.

“Much can change between now and November, but Republican candidates have a tough road ahead of them this year,” Barna concluded.

+ posts
Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

8 Million View ORU’s Viral Commencement Ceremony

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TaXhwZG7its A recent Instagram reel from Oral Roberts University featuring its 2024 Commencement ceremony has garnered over 8 million views in less than a week. The video, which showcases the graduating class united in singing “Goodness of God” by CeCe...

How is Our Ministry Shaped by Pressure?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=87zSp-evtKs&t=1s We’ve all had influences in our Christian walks. Some good, some bad, and some have been so influential they shape the rest of our lives in how we operate in ministry and the paths we take in life. No...

Experience God’s Power in Everyday Life

After I became a Christian, there were many years when I had no victory in my everyday life. I was miserable because I still had wounds in my soul from the past that made me insecure, angry, suspicious of others...

If Your Child Says They See Demons, Believe Them

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muaE4lw4Opw For many parents, the topic of seeing demons often is chalked up to a wild imagination and not a spiritual attack. And sometimes kid’s imaginations do get the better of them; they are children, after all. But what happens...

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top