Shows you who the tea baggers really are:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/05/AR2010100501491.html?hpid=topnews

One interesting tidbit:
'Among the differences between Christian conservatives and tea
partiers is their source of news, with 39 percent of the former group
saying Fox News is their most trusted source for "accurate information
about politics and current events" and 57 percent of the latter group
saying that."

--

Tea party, religious right often overlap, poll shows
By Michelle Boorstein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 5, 2010; 10:11 AM

A new poll shows that half of those who consider themselves part of
the tea party movement also identify as part of the religious right,
reflecting the complex - and sometimes contradictory - blend of
bedfellows in the American conservative movement.

The poll released Tuesday, by the nonprofit Public Religion Research
Institute, comes as the tea party's composition and potential impact
is still under hot debate. Experts disagreed about what the poll
meant, with some saying it reveals serious fissures between social and
fiscal conservatives and others saying the two movements can find
common ground on subjects such as limiting public funding for
abortion.

Institute chief executive Robert Jones said the poll, which was funded
by the Ford Foundation, aimed to clarify the relationship between the
two groups.

"The way the data looks, if this is a marriage of convenience, it's
one that would be against the law. The relatives are too close," said
Jones, a self-described progressive.

The survey, which polled 3,013 people by telephone over four days in
early September and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percent,
also found:

* The percentage of Americans who say they're part of the tea party
movement is 11 percent - about half the size of the group who say they
are "part of the religious right or conservative Christian movement."

* Fifty-five percent of people who say they are part of the tea party
agree that "America has always been and is currently a Christian
nation" - 6 points more than the percentage of self-described
Christian conservatives who would say that.

* Among the differences between Christian conservatives and tea
partiers is their source of news, with 39 percent of the former group
saying Fox News is their most trusted source for "accurate information
about politics and current events" and 57 percent of the latter group
saying that.

The poll appears to ask the most detailed questions yet related to
faith identity and the tea party. A Quinnipiac University poll last
month asked basic demographic information, revealing that 20 percent
of white evangelicals consider themselves part of the tea party
movement. A Washington Post poll published Tuesday found more than
half of all white evangelicals "support or lean toward supporting the
tea party."

Matt Kibbe, president of FreedomWorks, a national group that supports
tea party candidates, said he sees a "real shift" among American
conservatives "towards a focus on the proper role of government. And
from that you could get a respect of a division between church and
state."

Members of the tea party, including Christian conservatives, he said,
would generally think George Bush's use of government money to
subsidize faith-based institutions "was the wrong direction." They
also might have a strong personal opposition to same-sex marriage, he
said, but believe banning gay marriage "is not a role for the federal
government."

"If we had a debate about religion it would be like your family
Thanksgiving dinner table. Everyone would argue and passionately hold
their own view, but in terms of public policy, the glue that holds us
together is: What's the appropriate role for the government?" he said.

The new poll, however, showed large swaths of the tea party looking
for a strong government role in hot-button social issues. Nearly
two-thirds say abortion should be illegal in all or most cases, and 45
percent said there should be no legal recognition for same-sex
couples.

Mark Rozell, a public policy professor at George Mason University who
has written extensively about the religious right, said there were
repeated battles between social and fiscal conservatives in the 1990s.

"Now the word 'conservative' is accepted to mean generally small
government in the economic sphere but an activist government on social
issues," he said.

Right now, Rozell said, social conservatives aren't anxious about the
emergence of the tea party because they are happy there is new energy
among the conservative grass roots.

"They know what they can agree on, which is what they're against:
Obama, Pelosi," he said.

A complicating factor is the difference in priorities among younger
Christian conservatives and older ones, particularly on issues such as
climate change and legal protections for gays and lesbians.

He also noted that it's not new for religious conservatives to feel
uneasy about their place in the Republican Party. Many felt
unsatisfied with both the Bush administration and 2008 GOP
presidential candidate John McCain.

"This kind of coalition building becomes more complex if the
Republican Party takes control of Congress," he said. "I can foresee
the whole same scenario yet again, with new leadership telling
religious conservatives to sit down, be quiet, your time will come
eventually."

-- 
Larry C. Lyons
web: http://www.lyonsmorris.com/lyons
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/larryclyons
--
People need to realize that the plural of anecdote is not data.

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