Religion News Service
 
 
Mitt Romney holds huge lead among white  Catholics and evangelicals
Daniel Burke |  Apr  18, 2012
 
RNS) While President Obama maintains a slim edge overall against Mitt  
Romney, the presumptive GOP nominee holds a huge lead among white evangelicals  
and Roman Catholics, according to a new poll.
 
Obama lost ground in the past month to Romney among Protestants and 
Catholics  generally, _according to a poll released Tuesday (April 17)  by the 
Pew 
Research Center for the People & the Press_ 
(http://www.people-press.org/2012/04/17/section-1-general-election-preferences/)
 . Obama's support  has 
dropped among Protestants (5 percentage points) and Catholics (8 percentage  
points) since mid-March.

Romney now possesses a particularly large lead  over Obama among white 
evangelicals (73 to 20 percent) and white Catholics (57  to 37 percent). 
Religiously unaffiliated Americans largely support Obama (67 to  26 percent). 
Americans who attend religious services weekly favor Romney (56 to 38  
percent) while those who attend less often support Obama (56 to 37 percent). 
In 2008, Obama won Catholic voters overall, reversing recent trends, and 
made  small inroads among evangelicals, three-quarters of whom still backed 
GOP  nominee John McCain. 
Hot-button issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage have not played  
significant roles thus far in the 2012 campaign, but the faith of particular  
candidates -- particularly Romney's Mormonism -- emerged as an early flash  
point. 
Now, nine in 10 white evangelicals say they support Romney, with 84 percent 
 saying there is no chance they will change their mind, according to the 
Pew  poll. 
Meanwhile, the nation's Catholic bishops have waged a high-profile battle  
with the Obama administration over a new federal mandate that requires 
employers  to offer birth control coverage to employees. Though Obama has 
promised  exemptions for religious groups, the bishops call the mandate an 
affront 
to  religious liberty, and prominent evangelicals have rallied to their 
side. 
While Obama's overall advantage has narrowed since March, when he held a  
12-point lead, the Pew pollsters said "there is little to suggest a specific  
problem or campaign event as having a critical effect."  
Obama holds a large lead (56 to 37 percent) among voters who say birth  
control is a very important issue. 
In general, however, social issues are a low priority for most Americans,  
according to Pew, with more than 80 percent listing the economy and jobs as 
the  concerns that will determine their vote in  November

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