Monday, February 8, 2010

Mormons in American Politics

An interesting Gallup poll was recently released showing members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as the most conservative group in the United States. You can take a look for yourself but the survey was pretty extensive with high statistical confidence. According to the poll, 59% are conservative, 31% moderate, and 8% liberal. The next most conservative religious group is protestants who are 46% conservative, 37% moderate, and 16% liberal. So as a group, Mormons are much more conservative. Even when taking the ultra-conservative Utah into consideration, there is no significant difference. The percentage of Mormons who are conservative in Utah (60%) and outside Utah (58%) is practically the same. Surprising? For most of us probably not.

The interesting numbers from this poll I found was Gallup's measurement of active versus in-active (Gallup refers to them as "lapsed Mormons) members. Among church-going members, 65% are conservative, 29% moderate, and 5% liberal. Among "lapsed members" the numbers flux greatly, 36% conservative, 41% moderate, and 20% liberal, very similar to all other Americans regardless of religion. I find it very intriguing that such is the case. I am a firm believer that you can be a church-going Mormon and extremely liberal politically (I know this may surprise or disgust many of you). For me, that cannot be the case but that is just the decision I've made.

So, if Mormons are so conservative what impact do we have in American politics and will we have increased importance in the future? Currently, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat from Nevada, is the most powerful Mormon in the United States government. [Note: I know his "power" doesn't really count.] There are also an additional 11 members of the House and 4 of the Senate who are Mormon. Considering we only make up 1.7% of the US eligible voting population that is pretty good. Practically all of the congressmen, however, hail from the western half of the country, where the Mormon population is the greatest.

Can a Mormon ever be voted President of the United States, a national ballot? Recently in 2000 Senator Orrin Hatch tried but that puttered then quickly died. Former Governor Mitt Romney also tried in 2008 and came closer than any other Mormon in history, but in the end he was defeated. Did he lose because of his politics or did he lose because of his religion? Or was it a combination of the two? Many of us would like to believe it was his politics, but I'm afraid it was more his religion. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints got a lot more media requests during Romney's presidential campaign than any other event including the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.

Elder Ballard recently addressed one event during Romney's campaign while speaking at BYU-Idaho:

"'You remember Mr. Huckabee who among other things said that Mormons believe that Jesus and the devil were brothers? Remember that? It went all over the media. Well, they are,' Ballard exclaimed to a laughing student body. 'But they don't understand that, because they don't have the Restoration. They don't understand that spiritual relationship...'"

So considering our small proportion of the US population and the lack of understanding among people not of our faith, I am afraid it going to be a long while, if ever, before a Mormon is elected president. I don't think it really matters whether in the future we remain reliably conservative or become more politically diverse. Our faith must be more understood before people are confident enough to vote for a Mormon.

[Below is a funny video from during the Romney campaign that exemplifies my point.]


2 comments:

  1. Great post. I don't think we'll see a Mormon president any time in the near future. There is still a huge amount of willful ignorance of the LDS faith, and some people would rather be a little afraid of it.

    Why are LDS people so overwhelmingly conservative? I believe it's the emphasis the church puts on individual autonomy and charity. Rather than allowing the government to take that ability from us, we choose to retain it.

    I'm up and blogging again, by the way :) Keep up the great work.

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  2. Way to stick it to him O'Reilly! He's exactly right when he says Bill Keller's comments are un-Christian.

    I agree with the above comment that it probably won't be happening anytime really soon. Mitt Romney has been the closest. And though I think religion was a big part of why he didn't win, his campaign had some major issues too. Everyone's wondering if he is preparing for a re-run. If the economy is still in bad shape at that time, he SHOULD have a better chance, but it still would be tough.

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