Analysis: Race, Religion and Politics Is on a Collision  Course That Will 
Shake Up the Political Parties

 
 
 
_Napp  Nazworth_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/napp-nazworth/) , 
Christian Post Reporter  
May 21, 2014|5:34 am
Two of the most prominent partisan splits in the United States today,  
race/ethnicity and religion, are undergoing a generational shift that promises  
to shake up the traditional alliances that comprise the Democratic and  
Republican parties. How party leaders choose to respond to this shift could  
determine the future of American politics for a generation. 
A majority of nonwhites support the Democratic Party; a majority of whites  
support the Republican Party. A majority of those with high levels of  
religiosity (usually measured by church attendance) support the Republican  
Party; a majority of those with low levels of religiosity, or no religious  
affiliation, support the Democratic Party. 
These demographic characteristics are not the only ones that describe the  
differences between the two major political parties. There is the 
urban/rural  gap (urban areas are mostly Democratic and rural areas are mostly 
Republican),  and the gender gap gets much attention these days, for instance. 
But, 
the  religious participation gap and the race/ethnic gap have been two of 
the most  prominent features of America's two-party system for, at least, the 
last 10 to  15 years. 
What will happen to these partisan gaps, however, as American Christianity  
becomes less and less white? 
In a _recent article for On Faith_ 
(http://www.faithstreet.com/onfaith/2014/05/16/are-millennials-really-leaving-church-yes-but-mostly-white-millennials
/32103) , religion reporter Bob Smientana  summarized the coming shift well 
with data from the Public Religion Research  Institute. Only about one in 
four of America's young (18 to 29-year-old)  Christians are white compared to 
seven in 10 for older Americans. More than half  of today's young 
Christians are people of color. And, young adults today have  more "nones," 
those 
with no religious affiliation, than white Christians. 
America's two party system is a result of its winner-take-all election  
system. Since political power is gained by winning a plurality of the vote,  
parties that represent many coalitions, enough to get at least 50 percent plus 
 one of the vote, are encouraged. Parties that are unable to do this, 
usually  called "third parties" or "minor parties," do not have long-term 
success. 
The coalitions that make up each of the two major parties have not remained 
 the same over time. Political parties, designed as they are to win 
elections,  tend to be more practical than ideological. Pragmatism beats purity 
when winning  matters most. 
Parties, especially whichever party happens to be losing, will seek to  
include new groups in its coalition by reaching out to groups that are in the  
other party's coalition or by mobilizing groups of people who do not vote at 
a  high rate. This is how party coalitions change over time. Some political 
 scientists refer to these changes as "realignment." Realignments do not 
occur in  a single election, but slowly over many elections. (While there are 
some  disagreements about realignment theory among political scientists, 
there is no  disagreement that party coalitions change over time.) 
A good example of a realignment occurred in the 1960's with the Republican  
Party's "Southern strategy." GOP party leaders sought to move white 
Southerners,  a group that voted Democratic in high numbers, into its camp by 
opposing civil  rights reforms. As the party of Abraham Lincoln and opposition 
to 
slavery became  associated with Jim Crow, blacks moved out of the 
Republican camp and became  loyal Democrats. This realignment led to the 
current 
race/ethnicity gap. 
Another realignment began in the late 1970's. GOP strategists reached out 
to  conservative Christians, a group that usually voted Democrat or not at 
all, to  include them in their coalition. The mobilization of these mostly 
white, mostly  Evangelical, Christians became known as the "Christian Right" 
movement. This  realignment led to the current religious participation gap. 
The current generational shift, where high levels of religiosity will 
become  more closely associated with non-whiteness and where secularism becomes 
mostly a  "white thing," promises to undo those old alignments, now 50 and 
over 30 years  old, respectively. 
So, what happens next? That will depend, ultimately, on how party leaders  
choose to respond to these shifting demographics. Will Democratic leaders 
ditch  the anti-religion and anti-Christian voices in their ranks to avoid 
offending  those with religious sensibilities? Will Republican leaders push out 
the  anti-immigrant voices and racist sentiments in their ranks in order to 
build a  "rainbow coalition"? We will see.

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