I’ve long been fascinated by the dynamic between Mormons and white evangelicals.
On the surface, the two groups look remarkably similar. Both communities are religiously devout, remain focused on evangelizing while maintaining strong social ties within their faith community and tend to lean to the right in American politics.
Under that veneer there’s been a lot of turmoil. It’s been my impression that Mormons have always felt a bit ostracized from the general American public. To combat this, the LDS church (or the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) put together a media campaign called “I’m a Mormon” with the goal of normalizing their faith to the average American. I think, in some ways, that Mormons wanted to be seen as evangelicals.
But many evangelicals want to ensure that doesn’t happen.
Some of the leading voices in conservative American evangelicalism have labeled Mormonism a “cult.” Even the Billy Graham website once described Mormonism in cultish terms before the nomination of Mitt Romney in 2012. External similarities papers over the fact evangelicals and Mormons are some strange bedfellows, to be sure. But, do they really see politics in the same way? The data tells a pretty complicated story.
I’m going to be writing occasionally for @ReligionMag.
My first post is trying to understand where Mormons differ politically from white evangelicals.
Mormons tend to be less conservative on issues of immigration and abortion. And they don’t love Trumphttps://t.co/wsJ9X7eT48
— Ryan Burge 📊 (@ryanburge) May 26, 2020
Let’s start broadly, with a look at partisanship and political ideology. In both cases, white evangelicals tend to be more apt to identify with the right side of the spectrum. For instance, 73.3% of white evangelicals identify as Republicans. It’s a bit lower for Mormons at 65.7%.
Speaking in terms of liberal-moderate-conservative, both groups lean heavily to the right side of the continuum. While 68.7% of white evangelicals identify as conservative or very conservative, it’s eleven points lower for Mormons – 56.5%. The cause of the divergence is that white evangelicals are ten points more likely to be “very conservative” and ten points less likely to be “moderate.”
What about vote choice?
I don’t have any reliable samples that go back before the 2008 presidential election of Barack Obama, but the last three election cycles do offer an interesting window into how Mormons view electoral politics.
In 2008, Mormons were nearly as likely to support John McCain as white evangelicals. It’s noteworthy that there was a slightly greater likelihood that Mormons would cast a ballot for a third-party candidate in 2008.
In 2012, Mormons obviously showed very strong support for Mitt Romney. His vote share jumped 11 points compared to McCain’s in the prior contest.
— Ryan Burge 📊 (@ryanburge) May 26, 2020
The election that pitted Donald Trump against Hillary Clinton put Mormons in a weird spot, though. While white evangelicals still supported the Republican at basically the same level (77.5%), it was Mormons who defected in large numbers. According to the data, just over half of Mormons pulled the lever for Trump, but that only led to a modest increase for Clinton. Instead, a quarter of all Mormon votes went to other candidates, with many choosing Evan McMullin.
So, while Mormons do look like white evangelicals in terms of partisanship and ideology, they don’t vote in lockstep.
Continue reading “Could Democrats Win Over Mormon Votes? Here’s Where They Diverge From Evangelicals,” by Ryan Burge, at Religion Unplugged.