American Evangelicalism: New Leaders, New Faces, New Issues
Does McCain Need Evangelical Voters?
Will Evangelical Voters Rally Around a Single Candidate in 2008?
Evangelicals and the Public Square
Young White Evangelicals: Less Republican, Still Conservative
Young White Evangelicals: Less Republican, Still Conservative
An analysis of Pew Research Center surveys conducted between 2001 and 2007 suggests that young white evangelicals have become increasingly dissatisfied with Bush and are moving away from the GOP. How will these changes affect the vote in 2008 and beyond?
¡Here Come ’Los Evangélicos’!
Rev. Falwell’s Moral Majority: Mission Accomplished?
When the late Rev. Jerry Falwell disbanded the Moral Majority in 1989, he declared that "our mission is accomplished." If Falwell meant that evangelical Christians had come to accept the idea that organized religion should play an activist role in the political process, his claim of success is well-supported by public opinion surveys.
A Christian Right Without Falwell
Evangelicals and the GOP: An Update
White evangelical Protestants have become the most important part of the Republican Party's electoral base, making up nearly one-in-four of those who identify with the GOP and vote for its candidates. This analysis examines the current state of evangelical support for the GOP, in light of the approaching 2006 elections.