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What About Kerry
and the Atheist Vote? |
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by
Paul Kengor, Ph.D. |
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November 11, 2004
While liberals complain
about the religious vote that went for George W. Bush, they refuse to
discuss—and perhaps happily accept—the non-religious vote that went for John
F. Kerry. Which ought to be considered a greater liability for an American
president: to receive the overwhelming support of devout Protestants and
Catholics or to be backed by atheists? Which speaks worse? Don’t we have
this backward?
We’re hearing plenty about President
Bush’s huge advantage in the 2004 election from evangelicals, and (less so)
about the extremely significant fact that Catholics who attend Mass weekly
voted for Bush by 55% to 44%, which is a startling religious rejection of
John Kerry, a Catholic. Yet, the one aspect of the November 2 vote that is
being completely ignored is the behavior not of the most devout but the
least devout.
According to CNN exit poll data, those
who attend church more than weekly made up 16% of 2004 voters, or 18.4
million voters, and they went for Bush by 63% to 35%, or by 11.6 million to
6.4 million, a difference of 5.2 million votes. However, those who never
attend church, which equaled 15% of voters, or 17.3 million voters, went for
Kerry by 64% to 34%, or by 11.1 million to 5.9 million, also a difference of
5.2 million votes.
This was much like the 2000 vote, when
those who attended church more than weekly went for Bush by 63% to 36%,
whereas Vice President Al Gore bagged those who never attended by 61% to
32%.
Ten percent of those who voted on
November 2 claimed no religion at all. They made up nearly 15 million
voters. Of those, 68%, or 10.2 million, voted for Kerry, but only 30%, or
4.5 million, voted for Bush—a Kerry advantage of 5.7 million votes.
In other words, religious voters who won
the day for George W. Bush in the 2004 presidential contest were countered
by non-religious Americans who tried to win the day for John F. Kerry.
The agnostic/atheist vote was even larger
in states where Kerry got the most ballots. In California, 24% of voters,
almost one in four, said they never attend church, and they went for Kerry
63% to 34%. In New York, those who claimed no religion at all voted for
Kerry by 78% to 19%. These eager atheists comprised 12% of New York voters,
and they offset those Catholics in New York who favored Bush by 51% to 48%.
So, atheists were most prominent in the
two bluest states. Hollywood and Manhattan made their presence known.
It has been noted that 22% of the
electorate, or 25.3 million voters, said that “moral values” was their most
important issue—79% of which went Bush. This should not suggest the other
side stayed home. Consider the abortion issue: While 15% of those who voted
believe that abortion should never be legal, another 15% said it should
always be legal.
2004 exit poll data point to a
statistically accurate profile: Next to African-Americans, the surest
Democratic voter is an unmarried, city-dwelling, Northeast, pro-choice
atheist with a graduate degree who thinks that gay people should be legally
married. The least likely Democratic voter is a married mom or dad who
regularly attends church, thinks abortion should be illegal, and cites
“moral values” as a top priority.
Liberals will maintain that Karl Rove
revved up the religious vote for Bush. What they don’t want to realize is
that they drove religious voters to Bush. Among the reasons were their
relentless attacks on Bush’s faith. America recognizes that George W. Bush
is not unusual religiously speaking, either by contemporary or historical
standards. When Frank Rich and Maureen Dowd hammer Bush unceasingly on his
faith, they merely preach to the choir, and unwittingly inform devout people
of who is not on their side (and why they shouldn’t bother with the New York
Times). The Democratic Party is paying a price by kowtowing to the liberal
wing’s fear of faith, embrace of moral relativism, and support of abortion
on demand.
If Democrats don’t like this situation,
they should change it. For starters, liberals should stop blasting Bush each
time he mentions God. Or, they might avoid nominating candidates like John
Kerry, a Catholic who claims that his faith affects “everything I do in
public life” except protect innocent babies in the womb.
The fact, however, is that liberal
Democrats will do neither, because they can’t resist. They are who they are,
and they are contemptuous of those religious “morals” voters who beat them
on November 2, who they view as stupid. That is a crass caricature born of
willful ignorance, of not interacting with moderate to conservative
Christians, of not visiting their websites and reading their publications—of
never pausing to accurately inform themselves of those they ridicule.
The Democratic Party needs to think hard
about why its candidate for the presidency was resoundingly defeated by
church-going Protestants and Catholics. Conversely, Democrats must pause to
contemplate why atheists are gung ho for their presidential nominees. Until
then, the Democratic Party will remain a very liberal political party that
will increasingly attract the most secular and least religious among us.
If
you are interested in learning about supporting the efforts of The Center
for Vision & Values, please click
here. Thank you.
*Dr.
Paul Kengor is author of
God and George W. Bush. He is also a
professor of political science at Grove City College and a visiting fellow
with the Hoover Institution. Contact Kengor at
pgkengor@gcc.edu. |