Times Standard (Eureka)

Ask more questions

- Terry Mattingly

After Democrats voted in the Alabama primary in early March, researcher­s for CNN and other newsrooms asked them several questions.

Reactions to the candidates were sorted by gender, race, LGBTQ identity, age, education level, political ideology and other factors. However, researcher­s didn’t ask about religious faith and how often voters attended worship services. They didn’t probe difference­s between evangelica­ls, Catholics, mainline Protestant­s and “nones” —Americans who claim zero ties to organized religious groups.

“We don’t know the answers to these kinds of questions because they are rarely being asked,” said Michael Wear of Public Square Strategies. He is best known for his work as faith-outreach director for Barack Obama’s 2012 campaign and as part of the president’s White House staff.

“This isn’t just about exit polls. It’s hard for Democrats to do their planning, and to allocate resources during campaigns, without this kind of data. … We need cross-tabs in these polls so that we can compare difference­s between white evangelica­ls and black evangelica­ls, between Catholics who go to Mass all the time and those who don’t, and other groups as well.”

Exit pollers researcher­s did ask about religion in South Carolina, the pivotal state in former Vice President Joe Biden’s stunning surge. It was significan­t that Biden was backed by 56% of Democrats who attend religious services “once a week or more,” while 15% of those same voters backed Sen. Bernie Sanders. Among those who “never” attend services, Sanders was the clear winner.

Similar religion gaps emerged in North Carolina, Florida and Tennessee. In news coverage, these trends were linked to Biden’s support from African Americans, including churchgoer­s — a huge voter bloc among Democrats.

That’s important informatio­n, said Wear. But it would have helped to know how Catholics in South Carolina voted, as well as more about evangelica­l Protestant­s — black and white. It would have helped to know what issues mattered most to active members of various religious groups and how faith affected their choices.

It’s possible that pollsters and journalist­s do not ask these questions, he said, because key “players in the Democratic Party leadership aren’t asking the big questions about religion, either.”

Part of the problem is that many Americans have decided that the “religious” now means “Republican,” according to a Pew Research Center poll conducted after the Iowa caucuses. Any quick survey of activist Democrats in social media — the Twitterver­se, in particular — would support the same conclusion.

For example, 60% of participan­ts in the Pew survey said that Sanders — who has cited the influence of Jewish culture in his life — was “not too” or “not at all” religious. Only 30% said he is “somewhat” religious.

Meanwhile, Biden was considered “somewhat” religious by 55% and “very” religious by only 9%. Biden has consistent­ly made Catholicis­m a prominent part of his public image, while taking political stands that clash

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