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Evangelicals Vote, "Nones" Falter
By James A. Haught
In the 2018 election, America's shrinking segment of white evangelicals mobilized strongly for the Republican Party but the rising cohort of nonreligious Americans failed to exert their full political power.
As secularism grows relentlessly, white evangelicals have declined to a mere 15 percent of the U.S. population (down from 20 percent in 2012). But they're so ardent for conservative causes that they constituted 26 percent among the 113 million voters who cast ballots on Nov. 6. And they gave three-fourths of their votes to GOP candidates, according to exit polls.
In contrast, Americans who say their religion is "none" have climbed to one-fourth of the population, but they were only 17 percent of voters. Skeptic-agnostic-disinterested folks apparently shun politics along with church worship.
I think it's a shame that "nones" mostly shrug while white evangelicals throw themselves into elections. Nonreligious Americans tend to hold liberal, compassionate, progressive views, and if their full potential could be realized, the nation's values would improve.
Prodding "nones" to become politically active to show them the importance of democracy involvement should be a top goal of the secular movement.
On the other side, prodding is fierce among white evangelicals. A New York Times report titled "God's Red Army" outlined a massive fundamentalist blitz designed to generate born-again votes for Republicans on Election Day.
For example, Ralph Reed's Faith & Freedom Coalition budgeted $18 million "to micro-target around 125 million social conservative voters across 19 different states through door-to-door interactions, digital ads, phone calls and mailers," The Christian Post reported. A total of 28 million digital ads were e-mailed to smartphones and laptops on the weekend before balloting.
For example, the Family Research Council sent 36-page "values voter" guides to 28,000 far-right pastors before the election, and also sent "values buses" to key congressional districts as mobile get-out-the-vote units.
For example, Watchmen on the Wall held "pastor briefings" in various states to help ministers mobilize their congregations.
Technically, preachers are forbidden to endorse political parties or candidates but the electioneering blitz left no doubt that the "pro-life party" is the GOP, which also champions "religious freedom," meaning the right to hate gays, Muslims and other "enemies."
As the pre-election operation went ballistic, longtime American Atheists leader Ed Buckner wished sarcastically that the Rapture would whisk all the fundamentalists to heaven before they could vote.
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