The causes of political shifts in the evangelical movement

Last week, Faith in Public Life and Third Way released a study, Come, Let us Reason Together (PDF).  The study has been the subject of a fairly intense back-and-forth debate with pastordan at Street Prophets, mostly about the partisan implications of the study, and what we (as progressives, or as Democrats, take your pick) should do about it.

One of the most interesting findings of the report are that evangelicals can be decomposed, politically, into three groups: progressive (about one-fifth of evangelicals), moderate (one-third), and conservative/traditionalist (one-half).  Despite these ideological monikers, the group is every bit as conservative in voting behaviors as we've otherwise heard: 88% of conservative evangelicals, 64% of centrists, and 48% of progressive evangelicals voted for Bush.  By contrast, 43% of self-described moderates, and 14% of self-described liberals, voted for Bush in 2004, according to CNN's 2004 exit polls.  It's not their voting habits, but their positions on cultural and economic issues which make some evangelicals "progressive" and "moderate", according to Third Way.

Now, this may or may not be a political opportunity for Democrats.  The 2006 exit poll results, in which 74% of evangelicals voted for Congressional Republicans (compared to 78% support for Bush in 2004) certainly don't suggest as much: in a Democratic wave election, evangelicals are still heavily pro-Republican.  But the evangelical world is changing slowly, and it's at least theoretically possible that there may be some long-term potential in this group.

The cause of that slow change interests me much more than the effects of the change, revealed in voting patterns and poll responses.  Why are evangelicals suddenly beginning to speak out against the war, for the environment, and for the poor?  What is going on, in the Sunday sermons and the small group ministries of evangelical churches, which is producing this shift?

There are a couple of different ways to understand this shift, and they parallel the way I understand the political power of the evangelical movement generally.  One model supposes that the religious movement is largely apolitical internally, and that its interaction with the political world is driven through a number of religio-political leaders who drive the political efforts of the movement at a number of levels.  These leaders include, most notoriously, folks like James Dobson at the highest level, some political pastors at a more localized level, and a mostly unnoticed group of politicized lay leaders within the churches, who are active both in church and political life.  Some of the accounts in Applebee's America certainly seem to suggest that this model is correct, although those accounts are purely anecdotal.

Another model supposes that the theological underpinnings of the evangelical world are changing, and that those theological changes are producing parallel political changes.  This model would predict that more and more evangelical pastors are focusing on the social justice aspects of the Gospels, for example, or that evangelical churchgoers are more and more curious about those portions of the Bibles (regardless of the messages coming from the pulpit.)  Some aspects of the political shift in the evangelical world seem consistent with this model - particularly the recent popularity of "creation care", an evangelical theology of environmental responsibility.  It appears that creation care is itself a response to heightened environmental awareness in the general public, but the concept nevertheless seems to be theological first, and political only in after-effects.

The difference between these two models is profound, and affects the actions of Democratic candidates going forward in very different ways.  If the evangelical movement is mostly apolitical internally, and its political efforts are affected by key players who have a foot in the political world, then Democrats can only hope to make major headway in winning evangelical votes by winning support from those key players, or at least neutralizing their impact within the evangelical world.  On the other hand, if the political changes are the by-product of underlying theological change, then winning evangelical votes may be as simple as not insulting evangelicals directly, and doing some broad-based outreach around issues of mutual consent, like global warming and economic justice.  

But beyond vote-getting, the progressive movement should be concerned with these two very different models for another reason: social change.  As both a political and a cultural movement, we should be concerned not just with winning elections, but also with changing our larger cultural environment.  Our movement is strongest, and, we believe, our country is strongest, when more and more people subscribe to a "we're all in this together" worldview, to borrow Paul Waldman's formulation.  If the first model is correct, and we are gaining a few evangelical supporters here and there because of rifts within the political leadership of the evangelical movement, then the long-term prospects for progressive social change are weak - or, at any rate, progressive social change isn't served by the evangelical movement at all.  If the second model is correct, then there is some hope for long-term progressive social change through the evangelical movement.

I wish there was a bit more data on this kind of thing, but there just isn't.  Most of the data we have about the political nature of the evangelical movement addresses things like voting behavior and issue positions, not the causes of that change.  That's somewhat understandable, because voting behavior and issue positions are concrete quantities which can easily be measured in a variety of ways.  Shifts in theology and the relative influence of various individuals within a movement are much harder to measure.  Regardless, I think the progressive movement needs to start paying a lot more attention to the underlying causes of evangelical political attitudes; it is crucial to long-term social change.

Tags: Evangelicals, religion (all tags)

Comments

21 Comments

Re: The causes of political shifts

I do know some Evangelicals in the Great Lakes area who are very progressive.

Hence, I've always thought of conservative fundies to be a subgroup of Evangelicals, albeit the biggest one by far.

Is it possible that previously surveys never drilled down far enough to include the more progressive elements?

by Bush Bites 2007-10-14 08:40PM | 0 recs
Re: The causes of political shifts

"Is it possible that previously surveys never drilled down far enough to include the more progressive elements?"

Absolutely.  Most exit polls go no further than generic religious affiliation (e.g., Catholic, Protestant, Jewish) and frequency of religious attendance, and occasionally ask if the respondent was "born again" or some similar indicator of evangelical status.  But research that includes conservative vs. progressive religious orientation is still rare.  John Green of the University of Akron is the top name in this sort of research; see his latest book, "The Faith Factor," for details.

by KTinOhio 2007-10-14 08:51PM | 0 recs
Re: The causes of political shifts

thanks for the reference!  much appreciated.  i'll have to check that out.

by Shai Sachs 2007-10-15 02:19AM | 0 recs
I think abortion is a deal-breaker

for many evangelicals and will continue to be a deal-breaker.

Friends who grew up in conservative Christian families confirm this.

I occasionally read some mothering blogs that are written by conservative Christians. They are sometimes quite critical of Bush (for instance, regarding his recent comments about how Muslims and Christians pray to the same God):

http://makinghome.blogspot.com/2007/10/p resident-bush-and-syncretism.html

Reading the comments underneath that post, you can see how disappointed many of these evangelicals are in Bush.

I even occasionally see criticism of the Iraq War on these blogs.

However, the bloggers are still solidly Republican (supporting Paul or Huckabee, for instance), and urge their readers to vote based on the abortion issue. For instance:

http://makinghome.blogspot.com/2007/09/h orror-of-abortion-and-what-we-can-do.htm l

I don't see this group as a likely source of many additional votes for Democrats.

by desmoinesdem 2007-10-14 09:25PM | 0 recs
Re: I think abortion is a deal-breaker

What I have been reading alot lately is the Evangelicals feel used by the Republicans.  They work hard to get out the vote and they are promised alot in return but they never see anything materialized.  Bush just recently called them a bunch of nuts. The younger ones don't want their churches used for politics.  

Another couple of things that have been bothering this group, they are pro-environment and once again feel that they are at odds with this administration.  The privatization of Social Security has really rangled them.  Bush never discussed this issue with them and it came as a broadside to their people.

Interesting poll--maybe we won't see significant changes in 08 -- but like you I think things are changing.

by changehorses08 2007-10-14 10:41PM | 0 recs
Re: I think abortion is a deal-breaker

in theory, SCHIP should divide the anti-abortion movement because true pro-lifers don't believe life begins at conception and ends at birth, the way "pro-life" political pimps like Ralph Reed do.

true pro-lifers also oppose the death penalty and war.

Because of the crucial role of sex education, Republican anti-abortion policies increase abortions, while Democratic pro-choice policies decrease abortions.

But evangelicals don't analyze using facts, they rely on theology which is why they fall for GOP rhetoric rather than Democratic results.

by bob fertik 2007-10-15 05:49AM | 0 recs
Re: I think abortion is a deal-breaker

I think one thing that prevents Democrats from making much headway into this group is the utter inability of most in the progressive community to actually talk to religious voters without condescending towards them.  When we state that they don't analyze using facts, but rely on theology, we do tend to tick even the most intelligent of them off.

For the religious voter, their faith simply IS.  It is not up for debate in the political arena.  Policy prescriptions are, but their faith is not.  And denigrating it by suggesting that they are out to lunch will certainly keep progressives from winning any allies in that movement, even on issues where they should be vocal supporters.

This and other comments in this thread demonstrate one of the saddest dynamics in politics today; pitting ourselves against one of the chief voices for justice and mercy in the world.

by Matusleo 2007-10-15 08:07AM | 0 recs
Re: I think abortion is a deal-breaker

The following figures come from the University of Akron's surveys of the American electorate befoe and after the 2004 election.  Traditional Evangelicals are basically the Religious Right, Centrist Evangelicals are part of a moderately conservative bloc of voters, and Modernist Evangelicals are relatively liberal.

Pardon the lack of vertical alignment; I don't know how to post tables.

        Partisanship           
    Percent    Rep.    Ind.    Dem.    D-R
Electorate    100.0    38    20    42    4
All Evang. Protestant    26.3    56    17    27    -29
Traditional Evang.    12.6    70    10    20    -50
Centrist Evang.    10.8    47    23    30    -17
Modernist Evang.    2.9    31    25    44    13

        Ideology           
    Percent    Cons.    Mod.    Lib.    L-C
Electorate    100.0    35    43    22    -13
All Evang. Protestant    26.3    55    31    14    -41
Traditional Evang.    12.6    66    25    9    -57
Centrist Evang.    10.8    48    36    16    -32
Modernist Evang.    2.9    30    39    31    1

        Importance of religion           
        to political thinking           
    Percent    Important    Somewhat    Not Imp.    NI-Imp
Electorate    100.0    39    24    37    -2
All Evang. Protestant    26.3    58    21    21    -37
Traditional Evang.    12.6    81    10    9    -72
Centrist Evang.    10.8    41    32    27    -14
Modernist Evang.    2.9    21    27    52    31

        Issue Priority           
    Percent    Economy    Foreign    Culture    Pol. Proc.
Electorate    100.0    43    30    20    7
All Evang. Protestant    26.3    35    30    29    6
Traditional Evang.    12.6    27    27    40    6
Centrist Evang.    10.8    40    32    22    6
Modernist Evang.    2.9    55    29    11    5

        2004 Vote           
    Percent    Bush    Kerry    K-B    Turnout
Electorate    100.0    51    49    -2    61
All Evang. Protestant    26.3    78    22    -56    63
Traditional Evang.    12.6    88    12    -76    69
Centrist Evang.    10.8    64    36    -28    52
Modernist Evang.    2.9    48    52    4    65

by KTinOhio 2007-10-15 09:53AM | 0 recs
Re: I think abortion is a deal-breaker

I believe the marriage of convenience between the right wing and big money neo-cons is going to come apart at some point because while the Wings are anti-abortion they want to help women who  decide to have their babies. One would think that with a Republican Supreme Court that Bush and his cohorts could have finally overturned Abortion Rights.  But they haven't done it because they need to keep the right dangling.  This point has not been lost on the Evangelicals, who whatever we may of think of them personally -- they are sincere in their beliefs.

Far more frightening are the neo-cons whose agenda is to break the backs of the middle class, deplete our treasury by fighting unnecessary wars and eventually dominating the world.  At some point, the Christian Right will come to realize that there is more that brings us together as a nation then drives us apart.  Democrats can no longer afford to have a litmus test for who can and who can't belong to our party.  We have to have a big tent and welcome other points of view if we want to have a permanent majority.  

by changehorses08 2007-10-16 09:11AM | 0 recs
Re: Abortion & Gay Marriage

No doubt, there is a lot more restlessness going on today among Evangelicals & religious conservatives who are politically active.

This is a far cry from the 1990's leading up to   2000 when there was such a United front among evangelicals.

But because of the War in Iraq, and the additional issues on the poor, immigration & the environment- there is no doubt some heavy passionate discussions on these
major issues.

However, at the end of the day, the ISSUE of ABORTION & GAY MARRIAGE will always be the DEAL BREAKER among Evangelicals, Religious Conservatives & some moderates.

There are absolutely NO COMPROMISE on the issues of Abortion & Gay Marriage when it comes to 99% of Religious conservatives & majority of Religious moderates.

Therefore, as long as a Democratic candidate is Pro-Choice, it is almost impossible to get their support. Add any sort of Gay rights stand, that even adds fuel to the fire.

The ONLY shot Democrats will ever have is gaining more ground especially on a long term basis  among " Moderate & Progressive Evangelicals".

These two groups are much more open to looking at the Overall Picture & weighing in on importance of all the issues.

Such as fighting for the poor including hunger & shelter, fighting for the environment & fighting for respectful  treatment of Illegal immigrants, and Economic Issues such as Increasing Minimum Wage, Protecting Jobs, and affordable college.

It is definitely worth pursuing & courting these moderate & progressive religious voters since they are a large group of voters.

As long as everyone understands that it will require " Moderate" Democrats to win them over.

Many Moderate Democrats have had success in their respective states in  getting significant support among moderate evangelicals such as Sen. Nelson of NE, Sen. Pryor & Sen. Lincoln of Arkansas, Gov. Easley of NC, Gov. Brandesen of TN, Gov. Henry of Oklahoma, Gov. Freudental of Wyoming, Gov. Sebellius of KS, Gov. Beebe of AR, and Former Gov. Mark Warner of VA, and Sen. Evan Bayh of indiana.

The great thing of about politics & voting is it becomes a habit. Once moderate & progressive evangelicals start voting for democrats even once in a while, they start becoming more comfortable supporting the right democrats for them.

by labanman 2007-10-14 11:58PM | 0 recs
Actually, there mught be a way...

No one is pro-abortion; most Democrats are pro-choice.  So let's do all we can to provide real choices to women who would like to have their babies but see no way of doing so given current social and economic realities.  Improving access to health care (e.g., SCHIP) and child care are key, as is improving the employment picture.  Speaking for myself, I am in favor of any measure that figures to reduce the number of abortions that does not rely on restriction or prohibition through law.  The question for Evangelicals is whether they are willing to accept "half a loaf" on this issue; they're already on our side on many others.

by KTinOhio 2007-10-15 06:03AM | 0 recs
Re:Abortion, Pro-Choice =SAME

KtinOhio, unfortunately among the overwhelmingly majority of religious people- there is No Difference between the terminology of "Pro-Choice" versus "Abortion".

Your either against abortion or you are for abortion.

For non-religious people, there's a very simple & clear difference between the two, but for people with strong religious beliefs on life- its black or white.

Personally, I go to churh every Sunday. I have strong faith as a catholic. My wife & I would never have an abortion.

However, we respect & understand that "Pro-Choice" does NOT mean being "Pro-Abortion".

That's why we have no problems with the stand of Democrats.

But a clear majority of regular churchgoers who have strong faith have a very had time distinguishing the two. And I can personally understand & respect that.

For many if not most religious people, the issue of Pro-Choice & Abortion is Non-Negotiable.

by labanman 2007-10-15 08:53AM | 0 recs
Re:Abortion, Pro-Choice =SAME

I don't deny that there is no difference between pro-abortion and pro-choice for some evangelicals, but others can see the difference.  It's our job to make it clear that Democratic measures will reduce the demand for abortion.

by KTinOhio 2007-10-15 10:10AM | 0 recs
Re:Abortion, Pro-Choice =SAME

One thing that makes this argument harder to make is that groups like NARAL seem to be very antagonistic to groups that advocate for people to make the choice for life.  That has been my perspective at least.

The fact that abortions have gone down under policies that actually improve the economic well-being of the middle and lower class (read, Democratic Economic Policies), is one reason I don't  feel I am betraying my faith by supporting the occasional pro-choice candidate (though I am delighted that my new Democratic Senator is pro-life).

I make no bones about it: I want to see abortion gone; I think it is abhorrent, and I think it is murder.  But I know that simply making it illegal will not do that at all.  To effectively reduce them, one has to change the culture first, and right now, our culture has no respect for the responsibility and the blessing that parenthood brings.  

And I believe Democratic policies that work to care for children, mothers, and families, will go much farther than the posturing of the 'religious' right.

by Matusleo 2007-10-15 01:34PM | 0 recs
Re: The causes of political shifts,,,

I would like to believe the second model applies, but I don't.  Evangelicals are first and foremost authoritarians.  They got their faith not by love or reason but by fear and believing what they wanted to believe.  And sadly they vote the same way, e.g., for a phoney, vain lifelong loser who portrays himself as being a strong leader with Jesus in his heart and tells them it's a black and white, good or evil world.  

by ocoocher 2007-10-15 04:01AM | 0 recs
Re: The causes of political shifts,,,

Well, that's an awfully broad brush.  I certainly don't like their voting patterns, but I'd hardly presume that even a majority of them "got their faith not by love or reason but by fear and believing what they wanted to believe".  And actually, this is too important a question to settle with such a simplistic statement.  How evangelicals come to their belief system is a very complex and important question, which has tremendous implications beyond politics.  It deserves really serious data, which, unfortunately, seems to be sorely lacking.

by Shai Sachs 2007-10-15 06:09PM | 0 recs
Re: political and theological change
A few comments from a white liberal evangelical (but not a fundamentalist):
  1. It is essential to distinguish "evangelical" from "fundamentalist."  The former by definition is an attitude of reaching out to people in the world; the latter, also by definition, is ideological and not people-oriented. Evangelicals are almost by definition politically and economically inclined to be progressive in their orientation. Aimee Semple Macpherson is one  classical, if extreme, example of evangelicalism: whatever else she did, she probably organized more genuine social service activities, including feeding the hungry during the Depression, than any other religious leader in American history. Jerry Falwell was, by contrast, almost the prototypical fundamentalist--remembered not for feeding people but for indoctrinating them.  
  2. Evangelicals tend to appeal to poorer people; fundamentalists, somewhat more to middle and certainly also upper class people who feel economically threatened in some way.  
  3. Shorter version: economic circumstance is a  leading indicator of theological change, which in turn sometimes preceds political change.
  4. Corollary: if there is a theological change underway (I for one think there is), then it may be an early signal of an impending economic collapse.
by Wilderwood 2007-10-15 04:02AM | 0 recs
Re: political and theological change

Hmm.  An interesting, if somewhat terrifying, conclusion.  I've not seen good data on this in a while, but a lot of anecdotal accounts suggest that evangelicals are doing quite well among upper-middle-class white folks.  Yes, they target lower-class folks, but their base, as it were, appears to be at least partially upper- to middle-class.  I've also seen a reasonable amount of anecdotal evidence that suggests fundamentalists do quite well among lower-class folks.  In short, I guess, I'm asking - have you seen some numbers that bear out this theory?

by Shai Sachs 2007-10-15 06:05PM | 0 recs
Ripe for a Persuasion Strategy

Folding your numbers into the election-day cross-tabs we get the following percentages showing the ballot box consequences of the evangelical vote:

% of the Evangelical Bush Vote coming from each group:       
 - 0.10        Progressives
 - 0.21        Moderates
 - 0.44        Conservative

% of the Evangelical Dem Vote coming from each group:       
 - 0.10        Progressives
 - 0.12        Moderates
 - 0.06        Conservative

A "persuasion voter-targetting strategy" aims to convince certain demographics or "clusters" of voters to shift their support to your candidates. I assume that Progressive Evangelicals are easier to persuade than the Conservatives.

What happens at election time if we convince the Progressive Evangelicals to go from 48% Bush to 38%, and the Moderates to go from 64% to 59% (a shift of 10% & 5% respectively)? Each of these shifts results in a 2% shift in the Evangelical vote counts from Republican to Democrat. If 2% of the Conservatives give up in disgust over Bush, that is another 2% shift, for a total of 6%.  

Across the country, white evangelicals are 25% of the electorate, however this percentage is highly variable from state to state, ranging from under 15% on the West coast and Northeast, 40% in the Midwest and Southeast, and above 50% in much of the deep South. (Can't find my reference).

The upshot: small shifts in the Republican base can have a significant consequence in districts that are closely divided. In states or districts with 50% evangelical, maybe we see a 3% change. That doesn't sound like a lot, but it is in line with voting shifts from 2004 to 2006.

Plus, there are other changes going on.

by MetaData 2007-10-15 07:47AM | 0 recs
Re: Ripe for a Persuasion Strategy

Well, as always, who you target depends on which campaign you're running.  Someone running for Representative in a 50%+ evangelical district is in a very different place from a candidate in a 15% district, and also in a different place from a candidate for President.  You are correct that small shifts can make big differences, but the question is, where is it easiest to get those small shifts, and at what cost?  Pastordan argues that the smart money is with moderate Catholics, and I assume that usually he's talking about presidential campaigns or statewide campaigns in states with "average" religious profiles.  At any rate, getting 3% of the population to switch their vote from R to D counts the exact same no matter who those 3% are - moderate Catholics, progressive evangelicals, or even pastafarians.

Actually, what is perhaps more important than persuasion is turnout: motivating enough of "our people" to get to the polls, such that "our people" constitute an additional 6% of the electorate, counts just as much as getting 3% of their side to switch.  Now, where does that 6% come from?  Partially, we need to expand the base, and partially, we need to do a better job motivating the base.  That means both ideological conversion (creating new liberals, perhaps by spreading progressive theology) and better platforms, better messaging, and better GOTV.

The 2006 elections showed that it was very difficult to move the evangelical vote into the Democratic column, and I'm not entirely sure why.  But my guess is that, in the short term anyway, evangelicals - whether modernist or not - are not going to help push Democrats over the edge.  We'll need to persuade moderates elsewhere, expand our base, and get our base out to the polls.

by Shai Sachs 2007-10-15 05:59PM | 0 recs
Pretty much agree with all that

Turnout and consolidation of our own is more important than converting others.

One nit. 2006 seemed to show a 4% Republican loss of evangelicals (not sure how they are defined) to the Democrats from 2004. I think the CNN exit polling is a reference for this.

by MetaData 2007-10-16 11:40AM | 0 recs

Login

 

Sign-in-with-twitter-lighter

Advertise Blogads