Pew Research Center
 
 
 
 
 
February 23, 2016
U.S. religious groups and their political leanings
By _Michael Lipka_ (http://www.pewresearch.org/author/mlipka/) _10  
comments_ 
(http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2016/02/23/u-s-religious-groups-and-their-political-leanings/#comments)
  
 
Mormons are the most heavily Republican-leaning religious group in the 
U.S.,  while a pair of major historically black Protestant denominations – the 
African  Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church and the National Baptist Convention 
– are two  of the most reliably Democratic groups, according to data from 
Pew Research  Center’s 2014 _Religious  Landscape Study_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2015/11/03/u-s-public-becoming-less-religious/) .

 
Seven-in-ten U.S. Mormons identify with the Republican Party or say they 
lean  toward the GOP, compared with 19% who identify as or lean Democratic – a 
 difference of 51 percentage points. That’s the biggest gap in favor of the 
GOP  out of 30 religious groups we analyzed, which include Protestant 
denominations,  other religious groups and three categories of people who are 
religiously  unaffiliated. 
At the other end of the spectrum, an overwhelming majority of members of 
the  AME Church (92%) identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party, while 
just  4% say they favor the Republican Party (an 88-point gap). Similarly, 
87% of  members of the National Baptist Convention and 75% of members of the 
Church of  God in Christ (another historically black denomination) identify 
as  Democrats. (http://www.pewresearch.org/?attachment_id=277849) 
 
These patterns largely reflect data from _exit  polls during the 2012 
general election_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2012/11/07/how-the-faithful-voted-2012-preliminary-exit-poll-analysis/)
 . In that year, 95% of black  Protestants 
said they voted for Democrat Barack Obama, while 78% of Mormons said  they 
voted for Republican Mitt Romney, who also is a Mormon. 
White evangelical Protestants also voted heavily Republican in 2012 (79% 
for  Romney), which mirrors the leanings of many of the largest evangelical  
denominations. Members of the Church of the Nazarene are overwhelmingly 
likely  to favor the GOP (63% Republican vs. 24% Democrat), as are the Southern 
Baptist  Convention (64% vs. 26%) and the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (59% 
vs. 27%),  among other evangelical churches. (In our survey, members of 
these groups can be  of any race or ethnicity, while exit polls report totals 
for white  evangelicals in particular.) 
Catholics are divided politically in our survey, just as they were in the  
2012 election. While 37% say they favor the GOP, 44% identify with or lean  
toward the Democratic Party (and 19% say they do not lean either way). In 
the  2012 election, 50% of Catholics said they voted for Obama, while 48% 
voted for  Romney. 
Members of mainline Protestant churches look similar to Catholics in this  
regard. For example, 44% of members of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) 
identify  as or lean Republican in the survey, compared with 47% who are 
Democrats or  Democratic-leaning. United Methodists and Anglicans are slightly 
more 
likely  than other mainline groups to say they are Republicans, while 
members of the  United Church of Christ are more likely to be Democrats. 
About seven-in-ten religiously unaffiliated voters (70%) and Jews (69%) 
voted  for Obama in 2012. A similar share of Jews in our survey (64%) say they 
are  Democrats, while all three subsets of religious “nones” (atheists, 
agnostics and  those who say their religion is “nothing in particular”) lean 
in that direction  as well. 
Jehovah’s Witnesses, who are taught to _remain  politically neutral_ 
(https://www.jw.org/en/jehovahs-witnesses/faq/political-neutrality/)  and 
abstain 
from voting, stand out for their  overwhelming identification as 
independents who do not lean toward either party.  Three-quarters of Jehovah’s 
Witnesses put themselves in that  category.

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