Posted on 08/19/2010 9:22:04 AM PDT by markomalley
48% of the nations Catholics now identify themselves as Democrats, while 43% identify themselves as Republicans, according to a survey released August 19 by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. In 2006, 52% of Catholics identified themselves as Democrats, while 39% identified themselves as Republicans. White and Hispanic Catholics have become increasingly divided on party affiliation. In 2006, 49% of white Catholics and 63% of Hispanic Catholics called themselves Democrats, while 43% of white Catholics and 30% of Hispanic Catholics called themselves Republicans. Four years later, 41% of white Catholics and 71% of Hispanic Catholics call themselves Democrats, while 50% of white Catholics and 22% of Hispanic Catholics called themselves Republicans Among the surveys other findings (survey results for Catholics did not differ greatly from Americans overall):
Source(s): these links will take you to other sites, in a new window.
Democrat Party - AKA the Abortion Party - how the heck do "they" keep voting for pro-abort legislators?
Or, to be more clear, people who define themselves by their ethnicity tend toward the DNC. People who don’t, lean GOP.
The +6 for Catholic overall is really good because it is a key swing vote.
The +13 for Jewish is also a good sign.
I, for one, don't understand it. But I am glad that it is moving in the right direction (no pun intended).
“Or, to be more clear, people who define themselves by their ethnicity tend toward the DNC. People who dont, lean GOP.”
In other words, leftists have racial hangups, and cling to race-baiters, like sniveling neurotics cling to their shrinks. The Democratic Party makes them feel comfortable with their ignorance.
Karl Marx, Joseph Stalin, and Adolf Hitler were all baptized...all were anti-religion later when their beliefs mattered.
Is there some reason they didn’t sample Protestant Hispanics? Republicans in a good year pick up around 40% of the Hispanic vote nationally. My sense is that the split among Hispanics of different denominations would be similiar to the split among white protestants/evangelicals vs white catholics.
This poll is from 2008-2010, ie, worthless.
What is interesting is that the most likely denomination to vote Democrat are mainline protestants.
So the prots need to clear out their own garage rather then complain about us Catholics.
Good point.
You'll find committed catholics and evangelicals on the same "right" side of all the key issues of the day, and you'll find secular catholics and "mainline" protestants on the wrong side of those very same issues.
That would tell me that, despite the noisy debates we get into here at FR, a committed believing catholic and a committed believing evangelical have much more in common with one another than either do with their secular barely-believing "co-religionists" lining up on the other side.
Yep, exactly. Politically, nothing changed when I converted. I still have much in common with my evangelical friends. Good folks, good people.
Of course, you'd have to ask Pew why they reported in the way they did. I certainly don't know. But I also notice they didn't report Black Catholics.
In protestantdom, those churches who are so-called "mainstream" belong to the wicked National Council of Churches.
They are not even churches at all. They belong to an extremely liberal wing of the Democrat party. There is nothing good about these "churches" and anyone still clinging to the hope of reforming them are deluding yourselves.
African Methodist Episcopal Church
The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
Alliance of Baptists
American Baptist Churches in the USA
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
Church of the Brethren
The Coptic Orthodox Church in North America
The Episcopal Church
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Friends United Meeting
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
Hungarian Reformed Church in America
International Council of Community Churches
Korean Presbyterian Church in America
Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church
Mar Thoma Church
Moravian Church in America Northern Province and Southern Province
National Baptist Convention of America
National Baptist Convention, U.S.A., Inc.
National Missionary Baptist Convention of America
Orthodox Church in America
Patriarchal Parishes of the Russian Orthodox Church in the USA
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends
Polish National Catholic Church of America
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Progressive National Baptist Convention, Inc.
Reformed Church in America
Serbian Orthodox Church in the U.S.A. and Canada
The Swedenborgian Church
Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch
Ukrainian Orthodox Church of America
United Church of Christ
The United Methodist Church
Pew has done the Hispanic Protestants, they vote to the right of the overall Catholic vote.
In 2004 They went for Bush by 56%, and in 2008 went for Obama by 52%. They are about a third of the Hispanic vote.
Actually mainline Protestants vote majority Republican and Catholics vote majority Democrat. The denomination most likely to vote Democrat are Catholics.
WooHoo! Good news for conservatives!
Protestant Hispanics?
That’s an oxymoron in my book. The Hispanics coming into America are Catholic. They are led away by lies of Protestatns in my opinion.
We’ve had this discussion before and I wish I had kept the link. Your numbers are wrong. The final number of Catholics voting for Obortion Obama was 48 percent. Still much too high.
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