Sunday, August 27, 2006

New Poll On Religion and Public Life

Last Thursday, the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life issued a new poll on Religion and Politics. The poll, which surveyed a national random sample of 2,003 adults last month, covers religion and public life, religion and politics, religion and science, and religious beliefs. The report's summary says:
While the public remains more supportive of religion's role in public life than in the 1960s, Americans are uneasy with the approaches offered by both liberals and conservatives. Fully 69% of Americans say that liberals have gone too far in keeping religion out of schools and government. But the proportion who express reservations about attempts by Christian conservatives to impose their religious values has edged up in the past year, with about half the public (49%) now expressing wariness about this.

The Democratic Party continues to face a serious "God problem," with just 26% saying the party is friendly to religion. However, the proportion of Americans who say the Republican Party is friendly to religion, while much larger, has fallen from 55% to 47% in the past year, with a particularly sharp decline coming among white evangelical Protestants (14 percentage points).

The survey found that white evangelical Christians make up 24% of the population. While 32% identify themselves as liberal or progressive Christians, this group is split among themselves on many issues. The Associated Press and Blog from the Capital have discussed the poll's findings.