That was what I was asking, yes.
I didn’t say that. This isn’t a statistical question.
It’s an opinion and experience question; whether atheists feel “at home” in the Democratic Party the way many Christians feel “at home” in the Republican Party.
This is probably closer to a breakdown that you might be looking for. According to that, 11% of Republicans are “religiously unaffiliated” vs 24% of Democrats. Those that self-identify as Christians of one stripe or another are the majority, (unsurprisingly I think), of both parties.
This.
What an odd OP. What’s it like being left-handed at a Phish concert?
I suppose the OP thinks that atheists choose the Dems as the lesser of two evils for those situations when lawmaking does intersect with religion (and lack thereof), and are disappointed when Dem lawmakers express their religiosity, either personally or through their lawmaking.
Perhaps the OP was recalling a thread from about a year ago, speculating whether Obama is a closet atheist – with some progressive Dopers saying “I hope so!” or “don’t I wish!”.
Not really. The chances of finding a Christian at either a Democratic or Republican Party rally are extremely good. The chances of finding an atheist is slim to none at either. Why do you think an atheist might feel more at home in the Democratic Party, since you brought it up?
Democrats, by and large, seem much more likely to favor evolution, separation of church and state, skepticism of religion, etc.
Looking at the Republican and Democratic Parties, why would an atheist opt for the Republicans?
Because some of us think that economic issues are more important than social issues. Also, I challenge your statement that Democrats are more “skeptical of religion”.
The non-religious/atheist Republicans I know tend to be of the fiscally conservative and libertarian sort. I don’t find the idea of an atheist Republican particularly odd.
There’s absolutely no bar on the first two items from being religious. And really only a slight bar on the third.
Here is a Gallup cross-reference:
Chart further down the page lists:
(%very-religious/%moderately-religious/%non-religious)
Republicans —— 49/38/29
Independents — 11/14/15
Democrats ——– 36/44/52
So about half of Democrats are non-religious, which is equivalent to about half of Republicans being very religious. The numbers seem pretty close to mirror-balanced by party. But I think a large portion of “non-religious” includes nominal believers who just lack much interest in church or feel disaffected to or even hostile toward religious institutions.
No.
Karl Rove is an atheist, so you have some evidence to back you up.
No, about half of the non-religious are Democrats. Based on the Gallup numbers, about 36% of Democrats are non-religious.
So do a large chunk of the Church of England.
You’re reading that chart wrong (or I’m misunderstanding you). The columns add up to 100% going down (okay, not quite, but almost 100%), not across. IOW, 52% of non-religous folk identify as Democrats, not 52% of Democrats are non-religious.
So, taking those numbers, if my math is right, we have this:
41% of Americans identify as “Very religious”
29% of Americans identify as “Moderately religious”
30% of Americans identify as “Non-religious” (not quite the same as “atheist.”)
So, applying that to the numbers, we get (rounded to the nearest quarter):
Of all Americans:
(very religious, moderately religious, non-religious, total)
Republicans: 20%, 11%, 9% = 40%
Independents: 4.5%, 4%, 4.5% = 13%
Democrats: 14.75%, 12.75%, 15.5% = 43%
Total: 96%
Or, for each party:
Republican: 50% 27.5% 22.5%
Independent: 34.5% 30.75% 34.5%
Democrats: 34.25% 29.75% 36%
Clothahump is one of the most conservative posters on here as well as one of the most openly atheist.
What a strange question.
I’m an atheist and a Democrat, it never comes up. If I were to guess, a lot of other Democrats are religious, but mostly don’t think religiousity should be enforced by the state.
I have participated in organized Democratic politics. Most of the people I have been friends with have also been sincerely religious, including of the Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Muslim and Sikh variety. I have never had an activist friend who was an atheist that mentioned it. They would be accepted just the same. Religion comes up as a side topic and isn’t the reason these people get together as far as I can tell.