Religion
Related: About this forumCultivating the nones
http://www.economist.com/blogs/erasmus/2014/01/non-religious-votesJan 28th 2014, 16:37 by B.C.
IT USED to be a truism of political science that the United States has a well-defined "religious vote"in the sense that church affiliation is clearly related to political choicewhile no such phenomenon exists in comparatively secular Britain. And on the American side, some familiar patterns certainly held up in the presidential election of 2012. Nearly 80% of white evangelical voters preferred the Republican candidate, Mitt Romney, over Barack Obama; Mr Romney's fellow Mormons were similarly supportive. Three-quarters of Latino Catholics voted for Mr Obama (a key factor in the president's re-election) while 59% of white Catholics opted for Mr Romney; this left Catholics as a whole evenly divided.
What about godless Britain? Theos,a think-tank in London, has just published a report that challenges the secularist trope. Analysing the 2010 general election and all previous ones going back to the 1950s, it observed that self-described Anglicans had almost always been more likely to vote Conservative than Labour, except for a few moments when the whole nation swung left. Practising Anglicans were more likely to vote Tory than nominal ones; so the old jibe about the Church of England being the Conservative Party at prayer had some basis in fact, despite the leftish thinking of most bishops on issues like debt and poverty. Meanwhile, self-identifying Catholics were consistently pro-Labour, whether their adherence was active or nominal; non-conformists were marginally more likely than others to vote for Liberal Democrats.
But neither in America or Britain does the evidence support any hard causal link between religious belief and the choices or values that people opt for in other areas of life. The British evidence may tell us more about sociology than politics. Church of England, the default-mode national religion, is a middle-class phenomenon, where it persists. The roots of Catholicism, meanwhile, lie in Irish or east European communities which remember what it was like to be poor. Its still not clear whether Britain has a religious constituency which politicians can manipulateand if there were such a thing, it wouldnt be desirable, reckons Simon Barrow from Ekklesia, a liberal-minded religious think-tank. And even in America, religion seems less of an electoral factor than race or ethnicity.
The really interesting question for psephologists and political strategists, is the profile of voters who profess no church affiliation but may still have an interest in the transcendental. As a thoughtful recent commentary in the Atlantic Monthly pointed out, one in five Americans already responds none when asked which religion they adhere to, and among voters under 30 the figure rises to a third. But most of these nones still believe in God or a universal spirit; nearly 40% call themselves spiritual.
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Htom Sirveaux
(1,242 posts)will tend to make people increasingly allergic to the use of religion as a tribal weapon.
cbayer
(146,218 posts)The upcoming generations are looking like they are really turned off by the overdose of the religious right over the last 30 years.
That's very good news for us on the left.
Htom Sirveaux
(1,242 posts)to the lost cause of fighting marriage equality, and the more they reveal that the anti-choice agenda is really about keeping their self appointed positions as the sex police, the more they marginalize themselves. But they can't let go of the tiger: their culture rewards extremism as proof of virtue, and ostracizes anyone who invokes nuance as a purveyor of disloyalty.
cbayer
(146,218 posts)support them for those positions and those positions alone.
But I agree that that group is getting smaller and the loudest spokespeople more marginalized.
It will take some time to reverse the damage done by the "moral majority", but I believe we can do it.
I love this line:
That says it all, and not just about the religious right.