Posted on 09/29/2004 9:48:28 AM PDT by LS
"Seismic" Catholic Shift to Bush
by Uwe Siemon-Netto
President George W. Bush has suddenly acquired a commanding lead among Catholic voters over his Democratic rival, Sen. John Kerry, according to the latest survey of the California-based Barna Research Group.
Barna called this finding a "seismic shift." In May, Kerry led Bush 48-to-43 percent among Catholics. Today, the ratio has changed to 53-to-36 percent in Bush's favor, reports Barna, an organization researching opinions and behaviors of the religious communities in the United States.
"That swing is attributable to an encompassing assessment by many Catholics of the leadership abilities, character, and policy stands of both candidates," pollster George Barna said. Sen. Kerry is a Roman Catholic, President Bush belongs to the evangelical wing of the United Methodist Church, a mainline Protestant denomination.
"Many of the Catholics now behind Mr. Bush have traditionally voted Democratic but have chosen a different course this time around," Barna said.
Catholics make up almost one-quarter - 23 percent - of U.S. voters.
On the flip side, "notional Christians" - those who have not made a personal commitment to Christ - are more likely to support Kerry. Of this group, consisting chiefly of mainline Protestants, 49 percent told Barna's researchers they would choose Kerry, while 37 percent preferred Bush.
Atheists and agnostics side with the Massachusetts senator at a 2-to-1 ratio. Notional Christians make up 38 percent of the American electorate, atheists and agnostics 5 percent.
Thus, "The Christian vote is crucial for Bush," Barna announced. His survey appears to signal a renewal of the decade-old alliance between conservative Christians, called "Evangelicals and Catholics Together." This alliance lined up against the intrusion of the postmodern Zeitgeist by opposing, for example, abortions.
Not surprisingly, evangelical Christians - approximately 10 percent of the electorate - are Bush's strongest supporters. Ninety percent in this category favor the president, while only 2 percent plan to vote for Kerry.
What is remarkable, however, is the overwhelming support (54-to-36) Bush enjoys among non-evangelical born-again Christians. That group constitutes about two-fifths of the electorate.
Barna uses the generally accepted definition of born-again Christians as those who say their personal commitment to Christ is still important in their lives today. They believe they will go to heaven because they had confessed their sins and accepted Christ as their savior.
These criteria apply to large numbers of Christians across denomination lines.
Barna describes evangelicals as a subgroup of born-again Christians. In addition to their criteria, this group affirms seven tenets: the Bible is accurate in all that it teaches; faith is very important in their lives; they accept a personal responsibility for sharing their Christian beliefs with non-Christians; they believe that Satan exists; they believe salvation is only possible through grace, not works; they are convinced that Christ led a sinless life; God is to evangelicals the all-knowing, all-powerful and perfect deity who created the universe and still rules it.
According to Barna, non-evangelical Christians do not agree on all these points.
"The faith factor looms large," Barna reports. Some examples: Bush enjoys greater support than Kerry among regular Bible readers (42-to-31 percent), weekly worshipers 47-to-26 percent), those who discussed a moral issue with someone during the last seven days (41-34 percent), and those who turned off a television program for ethical reasons during that period (49-to-29 percent).
The latest Barna survey has other intriguing aspects as well. It shows, for example, that the larger a congregation, the more likely it is that its members will go to the polls. This suggests that mega-churches favored primarily, though not exclusively, by younger Americans have become a massive political factor.
The difference is stunning: If a church has fewer than 200 members, only 41 percent are likely to vote. The proportion rises to 53 percent in congregations numbering 200 to 499 adults, and to 61 percent in churches with 500 to 999 members. Once a congregation has passed the 1,000-member mark, 63 percent will participate in elections.
Since the trend in the United States goes in the direction of larger congregations, this is good news for George W. Bush. For it is from the faithful of those giant churches that he can expect the greatest support (65 percent), not from small-church worshipers, of whom only 47 percent favor him.
In presenting his latest findings, Barna cautioned observers to take nothing for granted, for even the faithful can turn out to be politically fickle. Nobody expected the "huge" transitions over the last two months, he said. By the same token, some voters might again switch allegiance as a result of campaign spending, debates "and the continuing saga of forged documents."
Add this Catholic to W
No faithful Catholic that believes in the truth and teachings of the Church would vote for an abortion approving, liberal elitess, homosexual marriage supporter. It goes strictly against the teachings of the Church... and has a direct influence on our children being brought up in the Church.
Does anyone know who Catholics went for in 2000? I'm surious what that percentage was.
Conservatvie Catholics should thank the bishops for finally getting serious about this issue. We have a new bishop in the Richmond (VA) Diocese and he's not messing around. It was made clear last Sunday that one can not support abortion or pro-abortion politicians and be a faithful Catholic.
"That swing is attributable to an encompassing assessment by many Catholics of the leadership abilities, character, and policy stands of both candidates," pollster George Barna said. Sen. Kerry is a Roman Catholic"
Kerry is as much a Catholic as I am a Martian. He attends some weirdo congregation run by a bunch of radicals, supports abortion, and has been married twice.
Some Catholic.
"In May, Kerry led Bush 48-to-43 percent among Catholics. Today, the ratio has changed to 53-to-36 percent in Bush's favor,"
this is BIG! Good news.
If this trend is correct, in which states would W stand to benefit most? I imagine Massachussetts would be among them, but I don't see this trend even making a dent in Effin's lead there.
KERRY IS A DISGRACE TO CATHOLICS! HE SHOULD BE EXCOMMUNICATED!
The 12 most heavily Catholic states are Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Vermont in New England; New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania in the Midatlantic; Illinois and Wisconsin in the upper Midwest; Louisiana; and New Mexico. Together, these states have 149 electoral votes, more than half of the 270 required to elect a president. In 1996, Bill Clinton won all 149 of them. Seven other states with above-average Catholic percentages of the population--California, Hawaii, Nevada, North Dakota, Minnesota, Maine, and Michigan--have 97 electoral votes. Added together, these 19 states have 246 electoral votes, nearly enough to win. Clinton won 243 of them in the 1996 presidential election, compared to three for Bob Dole. In the remaining 31 states, Dole beat Clinton 156-136 in the electoral vote count. It seems apparent that Catholic voter support for the Clinton-Gore ticket thus was critical to its national success.
From this I'd infer that the Catholic shift might help Bush most in NH, PA, WI, LA, and NM.

So what if I promote Abortion and am against the U.S. Defense of Marriage Act? So what if I left my wife and children for other women, only getting an annulment at the last moment? Who cares if an archbishop says I shouldn't have communion? Catholics have to vote for me, because I'm catholic!
/sarcasm off
ping
Good.
Abandon your faith, Mr. Kerry, and the faithful will abandon you.
Thus endeth the lesson.
all the Catholics i know are voting for BUSH!!!
Another Catholic for W. Excommunicate all faux-Catholic politicians.
Very big news. Now maybe conservatives will stop bashing Catholics, and recognize we comprise 28% of the total population, making us the largest religious sect (with each Protestant sect being counted separately) in the country.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.