NPR
 
 
Add This Group To Obama's Winning Coalition: 'Religiously Unaffiliated'
 
 
 
by _Liz Halloran_ (http://www.npr.org/people/101266638/liz-halloran) 

December 09,  2012


 
The big demographic story out of the 2012 presidential election may have 
been  President Obama's domination of the Hispanic vote, and rightfully so. 
But as we close the book on the election, it bears noting that another less 
 obvious bloc of key swing state voters helped the president win a second  
term. 
They're the "nones" — that's the Pew Research Center's shorthand for the  
growing number of American voters who don't have a specific religious  
affiliation. Some are agnostic, some atheist, but more than half define  
themselves as either "religious" or "spiritual but not religious," Pew found in 
 a 
_recent survey_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/uploadedFiles/Topics/Religious_Affiliation/Unaffiliated/NonesOnTheRise-full.pdf)
 . 
They are typically younger, more socially liberal than their forebears, 
vote  Democratic, and now make up nearly 20 percent of the country's 
population. Exit  polls suggest that 12 percent of voters on Election Day were 
counted 
as  "religiously unaffiliated."
 
"This really is a striking development in American politics," says Gregory  
Smith of the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. "There's no question that 
 the religiously unaffiliated are a very important, politically 
consequential  group." 
The religiously unaffiliated voters are almost as strongly Democratic as  
white evangelicals are Republican, polls show. 
Their overwhelming support of Obama proved crucial in a number of swing  
states where the president lost both the Catholic and Protestant vote by 
single  and low-double digits, but won the "nones" by capturing 70-plus percent 
of their  votes. 
Big And Growing Formal Religion Gap 
Election analysts have hashed over the gender gap and the marriage gap. 
They  talked about Hispanic voters and gay voters. But it was the religiously  
unaffiliated voters, says Iowa-based pollster J Ann Selzer, who gave her one 
of  the election season's big "aha" moments.
 
Selzer tells us that in her last Iowa poll before Election Day, data she 
had  compiled for the Des Moines Register showed that Obama was losing to  GOP 
nominee Mitt Romney among both Protestant and Catholic voters. 
Those voters make up 88 percent of the state's electorate, yet her final  
numbers still had Obama leading Romney by 5 percentage points. 
"I see this in the data, and give a shout out to Michelle," Selzer says,  
referring to her research assistant, Michelle Yeoman. 
"How is this possible?" Selzer recalls saying. "I was pretty much  
awestruck." 
What Selzer found was that though her polling showed Romney leading among  
Catholics by 14 points and among Protestants by 6 points, Obama was winning 
the  "nones" by a 52-point margin. 
It defied conventional wisdom, she says, but Election Day largely bore out  
her numbers (though Romney's advantage with Catholics in the states was 
actually  only 5 points) and the dynamic was replicated in a slew of other 
swing states  the president carried. 
— In Ohio, Obama lost the Protestant vote by 3 points and the Catholic vote 
 by 11, but he won the "nones" — 12 percent of the state's electorate — by 
47  points. 
— In Virginia, Obama lost Protestants by 9 points and Catholics by 10 
points,  but won 76 percent of the "nones," who were 10 percent of the  
electorate.
 
— In Florida, Obama lost Protestants by 16 points and Catholics by 5 
points,  but captured 72 percent of the "nones." They were 15 percent of the  
electorate. 
Similar results were seen in states including Michigan, New Hampshire and  
Pennsylvania. 
"It was hard to think this was just Iowa," Selzer said. "And it wasn't. One 
 of the reasons Barack Obama won was that he had the 'no religion' vote by 
a huge  margin." 
Nationally, Obama lost the Protestant vote by 15 points, won the Catholic  
vote by 2 points, and captured 70 percent of the "nones." 
"My question is what is it about having no religion that makes you align so 
 dramatically with the Democratic Party," Selzer says. "Sociologically, how 
 fascinating is this?" 
Some Answers 
Pew took a deep dive into this dynamic earlier this year, and came up with  
some answers. 
"One of the things that really jumped out at us in our analysis was that 
this  is a group that's quite socially liberal," says Smith, of Pew's Forum on 
 Religion & Public Life.
 
More than three quarters of them say that abortion should be legal in most 
or  all cases, and a similar number support the legalization of same-sex  
marriage. 
The growth in their numbers as part of the electorate is driven in large 
part  by generational change, and generational replacement, Smith says. 
"Young people just now entering adulthood are not only significantly more  
religiously unaffiliated compared with their elders today," he says, but 
they  are also more religiously unaffiliated than previous generations of young 
 people. 
He cautions, however, against conflating the "nones" with nonbelievers. 
"Those two things are not the same," Smith says. The "nones' are certainly  
less religious than those who say they belong to a religious group, but 
many are  also believers. 
"The absence of a connection to an organized religion is not the same as 
the  absence of a religious belief or practice," he says. 
Pew has tracked their growth, and found that in 2010 about a quarter of 
those  in the "millennial generation" defined themselves as religiously 
unaffiliated.  That's up from the 20 percent of Gen X-ers who said they had no 
religious  affiliation, and 13 percent of baby boomers who said the same.
 
The slow, but inexorable, growth of religiously unaffiliated voters is  
certainly a phenomenon political parties are watching, but Smith offers at 
least  one word of caution about where the dynamic is going. 
"Religious switching is a very common thing in the United States," he said. 
 "People go in and out of the unaffiliated column, and it's always possible 
that  if more people switch, it could have a countervailing effect on the 
trends." 
This presidential election, however, and the one four years ago, suggest 
that  Democrats have a firm hold on a not-inconsequential voting bloc, one 
that was  among the reasons Obama is in the White House for four more years. 
"They will be a big piece of what we are thinking about as we look 
forward,"  Selzer says, a sentiment no doubt shared by political strategists in 
both 
major  parties.

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