Catholic World Report
 
 
 
Catholics Beginning to Move Away from the  Democratic Party

It is likely  that Catholics—especially those who attend weekly Mass—will 
play a more  important role than ever in the upcoming elections.
 
October 08, 2014 07:48  EST
_Anne  Hendershott_ 
(http://www.catholicworldreport.com/Blog/3414/catholics_beginning_to_move_away_from_the_democratic_party.aspx#)
 




In a shift that may have consequences for the 2014 elections—and  beyond—
the Pew Religion and Public Life Project reported late last month that  
Catholics are continuing to trend toward the Republican Party. _Fifty-three  
percent of white Catholics_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2014/09/22/section-2-the-religious-landscape-of-the-2014-elections/)
  now identify with or lean toward 
the Republican  Party, while only 39 percent of them identify with or lean 
toward the Democratic  Party. _This  is a significant shift_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2012/02/02/trends-in-party-identification-of-religious-groups/)
  
from 2008, when Pew found that 41 percent of white,  Catholic registered 
voters identified with or leaned toward the Republican  Party, and in 2011, 
when 
49 percent did.  
Individual Catholics—including the clergy—are becoming more  vocal in 
their concerns about the Democratic Party, which many perceive as being  
dismissive of Catholic concerns about life issues. Last year, Most Rev.  Thomas 
Tobin, bishop of the Diocese of Providence, Rhode Island, _revealed_ 
(https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/bishop-reveals-he-changed-party-registration-from-de
mocrat-to-republican-ov)   that although he had been a registered Democrat 
since 1969, he decided to switch  his voting registration to the Republican 
Party: “I just said I can’t be  associated structurally with that group, in 
terms of abortion and NARAL and  Planned Parenthood, and the same-sex 
marriage agenda and the cultural  destruction I saw going on. I just couldn’t 
do 
it anymore…. The a-ha moment for  me was the 2012 Democratic National 
Convention…. It was just awful.”  
It is likely that Catholics—especially those who attend weekly  Mass—will 
play a more important role than ever in the upcoming  elections. While 
Republicans lost among Catholics in 2008 by 13 points, the  Democratic 
advantage 
became a seven-point Republican advantage by the end of  2011. Republicans 
now hold a significant lead among Catholics in  general. And many of these 
Catholics are more motivated than ever to get  out to the polls. According to 
the September 2014 Pew study, 79 percent of  all Catholic respondents 
revealed that they will “definitely vote” in the  upcoming elections. This is 
up 
11 percentage points from September 2010. In  fact, Catholics are more 
motivated to vote than any other religious group except  white Evangelicals, 
who 
also indicate strong support for the Republican  Party.   
Latinos—especially Catholic Latinos—still trend toward the  Democratic 
Party. In the 2012 elections, _Latino  Catholics were much more supportive_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2012/10/18/latinos-religion-and-campaign-2012/)  of 
President Obama than were Latino  Evangelicals. In a telephone survey 
conducted in 2012, Latino registered voters  supported Obama over Romney by 
more 
than three-to-one (69 percent vs 21  percent). The Pew Foundation concluded 
that “Hispanic Catholics who are  registered to vote look very much like the 
Hispanic population overall, with  nearly three-quarters supporting Obama (73 
percent) and about one-in-five  supporting Romney (19 percent).” In 2012, 
white non-Hispanic Catholics were much  more evenly divided, with 47 percent 
in favor of Obama and 46 percent in favor  of Romney in that same 2012 
polling period.  
Hispanic Evangelical Protestants are more narrowly divided, with  half 
supporting Obama and about four-in-ten supporting Romney in 2012. The Pew  
Foundation found that in 2012 “about seven-in-ten Latino Catholic registered  
voters identify as Democrats or lean toward the Democratic Party (71 percent).” 
 
It is difficult to predict how Hispanic Catholics will vote in  the 2014 
election. _In  a 2014 study_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2014/05/07/the-shifting-religious-identity-of-latinos-in-the-united-states/)
 , Pew found that 
although most Hispanics in the United States  continue to belong to the 
Catholic 
Church, nearly one-in-four Hispanic adults  (24 percent) are now former 
Catholics according to a major nationwide survey of  more than 5,000 Hispanics. 
Younger Hispanics are even less likely to be  Catholic. In the 18-29-year-old 
range, only 45 percent of Hispanics living in  the United States are 
Catholic.   
Still, Pew also concludes that Hispanics tend to be more  conservative than 
the general public in their views on abortion. While 54  percent of US 
adults say that abortion should be legal in all or most  circumstances, just 
four-in-ten Hispanics take this position. While most Latino  Evangelical 
Protestants (70 percent) say that abortion should be illegal, only  54 percent 
of 
Latino Catholics say that abortion should be illegal. For Hispanic  
Evangelical Protestants, 64 percent say that abortion should be illegal in all  
or 
most circumstances. Hispanic Catholics are more inclined than white Catholics 
 to say that abortion should be illegal (54 percent vs 44 percent). In 
this, they  are closer to the Republican Party pro-life platform.  
Hispanic Catholics are also more likely to favor “big  government”—and 
this continues to support the Democratic Party platform. In last  month’s Pew 
survey, _72  percent of Hispanic Catholics_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2014/09/22/section-3-social-political-issues/)  
favored a larger government, 
compared with  only 33 percent of white Catholics. Only 25 percent of Hispanic 
Catholics want a  smaller government, with fewer services, while 61 percent of 
white Catholics  prefer a smaller government.  
Not surprisingly, Hispanic Evangelical Protestants are much more  
supportive than Hispanic Catholics of having their church leaders publicly  
express 
their views on social and political issues. Only one-third of all  Hispanic 
Evangelical Protestants say church leaders should “keep out of  political 
matters.” _By  contrast,_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2014/05/07/the-shifting-religious-identity-of-latinos-in-the-united-states/)
  41 percent of Hispanic 
Catholics say that church leaders should  keep out of political matters.  
On same-sex marriage, Latinos—including Catholics—have become  more 
supportive of allowing same-sex couples to marry. Forty-nine percent of  
Hispanics 
favor same-sex marriage in _the  Pew 2014 study_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2014/05/07/the-shifting-religious-identity-of-latinos-in-the-united-states/)
 —
similar to the US public as a whole. Hispanic Evangelical  Protestants are 
much more likely to oppose same-sex marriage (66 percent  opposed, 19 
percent in favor).  
In an attempt to shift the white Catholic vote back to the  Democratic 
Party, progressive faith-based groups like Faithful America,  Catholics for 
Choice, and Catholics United—flush with foundation money from  abortion 
supporters at the Soros Foundation, and same-sex marriage advocates  like the 
Gill 
Foundation and the Arcus Foundation—are now attempting to convince  Catholics 
that the Democratic Party best represents their  interests. Catholic San 
Francisco, the official newspaper of the  Archdiocese of San Francisco, _has 
reported_ (http://www.catholic-sf.org/ns.php?newsid=26&id=62694)   that these 
philanthropists have funded the most recent attacks on San  Francisco’s 
Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone.  On June 19, when Archbishop  Cordileone 
announced his plans to speak in favor of traditional marriage at  the  National 
Organization for Marriage’s march on the Supreme Court in  Washington, DC, 
Faithful America—a 501c (3) organization funded by George Soros’  Open 
Society, Jon Stryker’s Arcus Foundation and the Gill Foundation—spearheaded  a 
petition drive on Facebook and other social media decrying what they described 
 as Archbishop Cordileone’s “lending the Church’s authority to the vitriol 
and  hatred—and undermining Pope Francis’ call for a more compassionate  
Church.”    
It is unlikely that spending money to attack Church leaders will  help, as 
faithful Catholics understand that Catholic teachings on marriage  cannot be 
changed through a marketing campaign. _A  Pew report_ 
(http://www.aol.com/article/2014/09/22/poll-support-for-gay-marriage-may-be-leveling-off/20966098/
)  released last month indicated that support for same-sex marriage  has 
actually declined—dropping below 50 percent from a high of 54 percent last  
February.    
It is more likely that pro-life issues are driving the departure  from the 
Democratic Party. Millennial Catholics—those born after 1981—are more  
pro-life than their predecessors, and many of them are motivated to vote.  
Although these young Catholics are also more likely to support access to  
marriage for same-sex couples, their support for restrictions on abortion may  
trump the same-sex marriage issue. _A  February 2012 study_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2012/02/02/trends-in-party-identification-of-religious-groups/)
  by the 
Pew Foundation revealed that among white  Catholics under age 30, support 
for the GOP has increased from 41 percent in  2008 to 54 percent in 2011. 
White Evangelicals under age 30 are even more  heavily Republican than those 
Evangelicals over 30 (82 percent vs. 69  percent). These young, faith-based 
voters are the future, and it would seem  that many of them are coming to 
believe that a party that has elevated as its  most important increasing access 
to abortion—including late-term abortion, and  tax-payer funded abortion in 
the Affordable Care Act—does not represent their  views. 

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