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US exit polls show few changes in the religious vote

RNS

Polling predictions frustrated and mystified voters on election night, as they did four years ago, when now-President Donald Trump far exceeded the prognosticators’ expectations.

One area where this year’s polls were mostly in line with expectations, however, is religion.

US election voting in Arizona

Voters deliver their ballot to a polling station, Tuesday, on 3rd November, in Tempe, Arizona. PICTURE: AP Photo/Matt York.

Exit polls conducted with voters by Edison Research for the National Election Pool and by AP VoteCast show that white evangelicals and Catholics changed their minds very little from 2016.

Support for Trump among white evangelicals remained constant (82 per cent), according to VoteCast, but somewhat lower in the NEP exit poll (76 per cent) –  in keeping with 2016 results.

Likewise, Catholics, who evenly split their vote in 2016, were also split between Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden this year.

Trump got 47 per cent of the overall Catholic vote this time, according to the NEP, and 50 per cent, according to VoteCast.

“In recent elections Catholics are pretty evenly divided,” said Mark Gray, director of Catholic polls and senior research associate at the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate.

Even Biden’s Catholic faith did little to sway Catholic voters. “Ever since Kennedy, Catholics have been no more likely to vote for a Catholic candidate than a non-Catholic candidate,” said Gray.

The VoteCast exit poll found that 68 per cent of Jews favoured Biden and 64 per cent of Muslims did so – roughly in line with past elections. (GBAO Strategies, which often polls American Jews, found that 77 per cent of Jews voted for Biden. )

Unaffiliated Americans or people of no religion favoured Biden to Trump 65 per cent to 30 per cent in the NEP exit poll and 72 per cent to 26 per cent in the VoteCast poll.

“There’s very little that’s shifted,” said Robert P Jones, CEO of the Public Religion Research Institute.

Neither, Jones noted, have Christians’ stark racial divides.

Blacks and Hispanics – groups that are both overwhelmingly Christian – favoured Biden by large margins. And exit polls showed overwhelming differences on a range of questions about Black Lives Matter, the criminal justice system and racism. Trump supporters, by overwhelming numbers, had unfavorable views of Black Lives Matter and felt the criminal justice system was fair and racism a minor problem.

Those divides have become so expected, said Jones, that we no longer reflect on them.

The VoteCast poll also asked about the frequency of worship attendance. It found that 61 per cent of people who say they attend worship at least weekly voted for Trump, versus 37 per cent who voted for Biden. Those who worship once a month went for Trump over Biden 54 per cent to 45 per cent.

“This suggests to me the level of polarization based on religiosity is still very important,” said John Green, director emeritus of the Ray C Bliss Institute for Applied Politics at the University of Akron.

Among less-frequent worship attenders, 57 per cent voted for Biden; 41 per cent for Trump.

 

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