Baltimore Sun

The role of religion in presidenti­al elections

- By Mark J. Rozell Mark J. Rozell is dean of the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University. Among his latest books are the “Oxford Research Encycloped­ia of Politics & Religion” (Oxford University Press), and “Religion and the America

Although attention in the presidenti­al campaign now focuses on COVID-19, the economy, the Supreme Court and health care, it is important not to lose sight of the critical role that the faith factor will play in the election outcome. Indeed, after downplayin­g the role of religion in the 2016 campaign, observers were stunned when GOP nominee Donald Trump pulled off a narrow Electoral College victory with critical help from white evangelica­l and Catholic voters.

In a narrow election victory, it is possible to attribute the outcome to any one of a number of key voting groups. But consider Mr. Trump’s unexpected wins in three Great Lakes states — Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin — were by a mere 80,000 votes combined. His improved showing among white evangelica­ls and Catholics over Mitt Romney’s 2012 numbers in those states was more than the margin of victory in 2016.

Mr. Trump’s showing among evangelica­ls was a very big post-election story in 2016. His impressive support from white Catholics did not get so much attention, but was key as well. Going back to the early 1980s until the 2016 election, the national Catholic vote tracked very closely with the overall national popular vote outcome. 2016 is an outlier in that Hillary Rodham Clinton won the popular vote, but Mr. Trump won a slight majority of Catholics. This year, Democratic nominee Joe Biden is counting on his Catholic identity to reverse the 2016 outcome among Catholic voters.

How can we then make sense of the religion factor in the 2020 election? First, consider the following voting breakdowns in the voting population­s among the one-party-leaning groups:

White Evangelica­l Protestant­s comprise about one-fifth of the U.S. population and vote overwhelmi­ngly Republican: 81% for Donald Trump (2016), 79% for Mitt Romney (2012), 72% for John McCain (2008), 78% for George W. Bush (2004). Mr. Trump is holding very strong support with this group, although with some minor but potentiall­y important slippage from his showing in 2016 with these voters.

Unaffiliat­ed, or the religious “nones,” are also about one-fifth of the population and are almost as solidly pro-Democratic as Evangelica­l Protestant­s are pro-Republican.

Black Protestant­s — just under10% of the population — are overwhelmi­ngly proDemocra­tic, and surveys have this group giving over 90% support for The BidenHarri­s ticket.

Small religious minorities — several percent of the population — mostly are pro-Democratic; these would include Muslims, Jews, and a number of Eastern and New Age religious identities. Mormons are the exception as a solidly Republican voting religious group.

Second, other groups divide their support between the major parties to varying degrees:

Mainline Protestant­s are slightly less than one-fifth of the population and the key determinan­t for this group is religious practice, not identity. The less religiousl­y observant splits its vote nearly evenly between the major parties in presidenti­al elections, whereas the regular churchatte­nding favor GOP nominees.

Catholics comprise slightly more than one-fifth of the population and are known as the “swing vote” in national elections. White Catholics lean Republican, while Latino Catholics are heavily Democratic; and observant Catholics are heavily Republican, whereas nominal Catholics lean Democratic.

In a closely contested election, the turnout of any of the above groups is potentiall­y critical. For example, surges in white evangelica­l voting in 2016 and 2004 played key roles in the elections of the GOP nominees. In 2008 and 2012, Barack Obama won the traditiona­l Democratic-leaning religions and unaffiliat­ed voters as well as the Catholic swing vote.

What is the path to victory in 2020?

For Mr. Trump, it is a large turnout and commanding majorities among white evangelica­ls and observant Catholics, a strong majority of observant mainline Protestant­s, and holding down his losses — or at least hoping for a tepid turnout — in the other groups.

For Joe Biden, it is to hold the same coalition of groups that the Obama-Biden ticket previously carried — Black Protestant­s, less observant white mainline Protestant­s, less observant Catholics, the religiousl­y unaffiliat­ed and many small religious minorities — while holding down his losses among white evangelica­ls and observant Catholics.

Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump themselves may not say much directly about religion in this election, but their campaigns surely will be working hard to court key religious blocks, as all recognize the powerfully important role that faith plays in presidenti­al elections.

 ?? PAULA BRONSTEIN/AP ?? Liza Durasenko, 16, from Oregon City, Oregon, prays during a rally in support of President Donald Trump, Aug. 29, in Clackamas, Oregon.
PAULA BRONSTEIN/AP Liza Durasenko, 16, from Oregon City, Oregon, prays during a rally in support of President Donald Trump, Aug. 29, in Clackamas, Oregon.

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