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Jan. 21, 2009
Obama inaugural strikes inclusive note on matters spiritual
The Associated Press
Jan. 21, 2009
Arabs and Muslims give Obama benefit of doubt on new way
Reuters
Jan. 20, 2009
Obama refashions America's old-time (civil) religion
Religion News Service
Jan. 20, 2009
With Warren and Lowery, Obama sends signals about religious outreach
Religion News Service
Jan. 8, 2009
Presidential church choice sends political, spiritual messages
Religion News Service
Dec. 12, 2008
Barack Obama: The first Jewish president?
Chicago Tribune
Dec. 4, 2008
Church leaders ask Obama for action on economy
Religion News Service
Nov. 15, 2008
Seeking a spiritual home in D.C.
Chicago Tribune
Nov. 13, 2008
Obama narrows, but doesn't end, electoral 'God gap'
Religion News Service
Nov. 11, 2008
Obama's Fascinating Interview with Cathleen Falsani
Beliefnet
Nov. 6, 2008
American Muslims relieved, hopeful at Obama's election
Religion News Service
Nov. 6, 2008
Experts: Obama gained faithful voters but didn't redraw map
The Associated Press
Nov. 6, 2008
Palestinians, Israelis see Obama differently
The Globe and Mail
Nov. 5, 2008
With Obama, a mountaintop moment for the black church
Religion News Service
Nov. 5, 2008
Re-energized religious left delivers for Obama
Religion News Service
Nov. 5, 2008
Analysis: Obama's Religious Appeal: Still Missing Evangelicals
Time
Nov. 5, 2008
Catholics Turned to the Democrat
The New York Times
Nov. 5, 2008
Analysis: How Obama Lured Millions of Religious Voters
The Wall Street Journal
Nov. 5, 2008
Obama Is Elected President as Racial Barrier Falls
The New York Times
Oct. 6, 2008
Barack Obama is making a lot of evangelicals think twice
Christianity Today
Oct. 1, 2008
Midwest Methodists may be 'sleeper' win for Obama
Religion News Service
Sept. 16, 2008
Obama counts rabbi among relatives
The Associated Press
Aug. 20, 2008
Obama's 2003 Stand on Abortion Draws New Criticism in 2008
The New York Times
Aug. 17, 2008
Transcript: Saddleback Presidential Candidates' Forum
CNN
Aug. 17, 2008
McCain, Obama share their views on evil, marriage, abortion at faith forum
The Dallas Morning News
Aug. 13, 2008
The 2008 Democratic Platform
demconvention.com
Aug. 7, 2008
Obama on Faith
Time
July 14, 2008
'I Am a Big Believer in Not Just Words, But Deeds and Works'
Newsweek
July 12, 2008
Finding His Faith
Newsweek
July 8, 2008
Religious Intensity Predicts Candidate Support
Gallup
July 6, 2008
Obama Addresses His Faith
The Washington Post
July 1, 2008
Obama to expand Bush's faith based programs
The Associated Press
July 1, 2008
Obama Courting Evangelicals Once Loyal to Bush
The New York Times
June 30, 2008
Analysis: Reading the Bible with Obama
Christianity Today
June 30, 2008
Analysis: Obama Works to Close Faith Gap
Real Clear Politics
June 18, 2008
Obama plans full-throttle push for evangelicals
Religion News Service
June 11, 2008
Obama Meets with Christian Leaders
The Associated Press
June 10, 2008
New PAC Seeks to Court Christians for Obama
The New York Times
June 8, 2008
Obama Reaches Out to Young Evangelicals
CBN News
June 3, 2008
Obama's Focus on Faith Offers Promise, Pitfalls for Democrats
Bloomberg.com
June 1, 2008
Following Months of Criticism, Obama Quits His Church
The New York Times
May 15, 2008
Obama stresses his faith in ads
The Lexington Herald-Leader
May 6, 2008
Obama's New Gospel
Newsweek
April 29, 2008
Obama 'outraged' by Wright's remarks
CNN
April 21, 2008
Obama Talks About Rumors
The New York Times
April 15, 2008
Obama Would Keep Faith-Based Office at White House
The Roundtable on Religion and Social Welfare Policy
April 14, 2008
Transcript: The Compassion Forum
CNN
March 26, 2008
Obama Talks About His Faith
The New York Times
March 18, 2008
Assessing Race in America, Obama Calls Pastor Divisive
The New York Times
March 7, 2008
Barack Obama's Evangelicals Close the God Gap
The Times of London
March 3, 2008
Obama Cites Sermon on the Mount for His Support of Civil Unions
Christianity Today
March 1, 2008
Obama on Religion
MSNBC
Feb. 29, 2008
Anti-Muslim Sentiment Surfaces in Attacks on Obama
Reuters
Feb. 26, 2008
At One Key Ohio Church, It's 'Obama Time'
Religion News Service
Jan. 23, 2008
Q&A: Barack Obama
Christianity Today
Jan. 14, 2008
UCC Head Denouces Political 'Attacks' on Obama's Church
Religion News Service
Jan. 12, 2008
Obama Asks S.C. Black Voters to Have Faith
Politico
January 4, 2008
Speaking of Faith, Obama Does
Concord Monitor
December 17, 2007
Barack Obama Attends Church, Describes His Faith Amid False Rumors
The Associated Press
November 28, 2007
Foes Use Obama's Muslim Ties to Fuel Rumors About Him
The Washington Post
(Note: The Washington Post's ombudsman addressed criticisms of this article in a Dec. 9 column.)
November 13, 2007
For Obama, a Handsome Payoff in Political Gambles
The Washington Post
October 26, 2007
Obama Sees Plenty of Votes in Black Pews
Chicago Tribune
October 08, 2007
Obama Says Faith 'Plays Every Role' in His Life
The Associated Press
April 30, 2007
A Candidate, His Minister and the Search for Faith
The New York Times
March 20, 2007
Obama's Activist Church Enters Spotlight
Associated Press
March 15, 2007
As a Child, Obama Crossed a Cultural Divide in Indonesia
Los Angeles Times
Dec. 2, 2006
Evangelicals' Open Arms, Wary Hearts Greet Obama
Chicago Tribune
Oct. 16, 2006
My Spiritual Journey
TIME
In His Own Words
''In time, I came to see faith as more than just a comfort to the weary or a hedge against death, but rather as an active, palpable agent in the world and in my own life.''
(June 2007 speech)
Last updated Nov. 6, 2008
Although his given name means "blessed" in both Swahili and Arabic, president Barack Obama was not raised in a particularly religious household. So it was somewhat surprising when, in 1985, two years after graduating from Columbia University in New York City, Obama, then a self-described skeptic, went to work for a faith-based community organizing group in Chicago. Obama was drawn to the motivating component of faith, seeing the civil rights movement as evidence of religion's potential to spur social change. In his 2006 book, The Audacity of Hope, Obama wrote that in the course of his work he came to realize that "I had no community or shared traditions in which to ground my most deeply held beliefs." He decided that, despite significant doubts, he could embrace Christianity as it was presented to him in a dynamic black church on Chicago's South Side.
"It was because of these newfound understandings -- that religious commitment did not require me to suspend critical thinking, disengage from the battle for economic and social justice, or otherwise retreat from the world that I knew and loved -- that I was finally able to walk down the aisle of Trinity United Church of Christ one day and be baptized," Obama wrote in The Audacity of Hope. "It came about as a choice and not an epiphany; the questions I had did not magically disappear. But kneeling beneath that cross on the South Side of Chicago, I felt God's spirit beckoning me. I submitted myself to His will, and dedicated myself to discovering His truth."
It was in Chicago that the U.S. senator from Illinois and 2008 Democratic presidential candidate established his spiritual roots and began to develop his unabashedly progressive philosophy of how religion can intersect with public life for the betterment of the common good. The religious turning point Obama experienced in Chicago also provides a spiritual narrative that many voters find appealing in their presidential candidates. According to an August 2008 survey by the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life and the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, more than seven-in-ten Americans (72%) agree it is important that a president have strong religious beliefs; this is virtually unchanged from recent years. However, Democrats and independents are less likely than Republicans to say they completely agree with this view. Slightly more than one-in-four Democrats (27%) and independents (27%) completely agree it is important that a president have strong religious beliefs, compared with more than four-in-ten Republicans (45%).
During the 2008 presidential horserace, Obama was far more willing to speak publicly about his faith and the positive impact religion can have on public life than was the 2004 Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, who told journalists at a 2007 Pew Forum event that he could have done a better job explaining his faith. At the same time, Obama's Republican opponent, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, appeared less comfortable talking publicly about faith than his GOP predecessor, George W. Bush, who made religious language a hallmark of his campaigns and presidency.

At a 2006 Sojourners/Call to Renewal conference, Obama said that the "fear of getting 'preachy'" may have led some on the political left "to discount the role that values and culture play in some of our most urgent social problems." He described himself as "somebody who really has insisted that the Democratic Party reach out to people of faith."
In the 2008 election, Obama made a concerted effort to reach out to evangelical Christians and other people of faith who tended to vote Republican in past presidential elections. Obama's outreach may have paid off on Election Day, according to a Pew Forum analysis of early exit polls. Among nearly every religious group, Obama received equal or higher levels of support compared with support for Kerry in 2004. Still, a sizeable gap persisted between the support Obama received from white evangelical Protestants and his support among the religiously unaffiliated.
Similarly, a sizeable gap existed between those who attend religious services regularly and those who attend less often. Fully 43% of weekly churchgoers voted for Obama, as did 67% of those who never attend worship services, for an "attendance gap" of 24 points. By comparison, 39% of weekly churchgoers voted for Kerry in 2004, compared with 62% of those who never attend religious services, for a similar attendance gap of 23 points.
While Obama tried to emphasize during the campaign the positive role religion can play in public life, a controversy surrounding his longtime pastor and the man who brought him to faith, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., underscored how religion can be a double-edged sword for a candidate.
When video clips of Wright's most controversial sermons were posted online and aired repeatedly on cable television in March 2008, Obama tried respectfully to distance himself from the man whose sermon "The Audacity to Hope" was the inspiration for both the title of Obama's second book and his speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention. In a March 18, 2008 speech, Obama called Wright's comments "divisive" and "racially charged" but said he could "no more disown him than I can disown my white grandmother." He then placed the pastor's comments in the context of the black church tradition and segued to a broader discussion of race relations in America.
However, Wright continued to speak publicly about some of his most provocative theories, including the allegation that the U.S. government may have planted AIDS in the black community and the assertion that the U.S. may have brought the 9/11 attacks on itself, saying, "You cannot do terrorism on other people and expect it never to come back on you." Obama then denounced Wright's comments and ultimately resigned from his 20-year membership with the church.
At a news conference on May 31, 2008, Obama said he and his wife, Michelle, made the decision to leave the church with sadness because "Trinity was where I found Jesus Christ, where we were married, where our children were baptized." He said his family would look for another church to join but "probably won't make any firm decision on this until January, when we know what our lives are going to be like." He added, "My faith is not contingent on the particular church that I belong to."
Despite the media attention generated by the Wright controversy and Obama's many references to his Christian faith, a June 2008 Pew Research Center survey found that only slightly more than half of voters (57%) correctly identified Obama as Christian, while about one-in-ten (12%) thought he is Muslim, virtually unchanged from 10% in March 2008. It was a misperception Obama's campaign tried to combat. For example, Obama's campaign website devoted a page to the issue with the headline, "Obama Has Never Been a Muslim, And Is a Committed Christian." Prior to the South Carolina primary on Jan. 26, 2008, the Obama campaign distributed brochures titled "Committed Christian," featuring a photograph of Obama at a pulpit in front of a large cross.
"It's not just that I'm a Christian and some of these e-mails are misinforming people," Obama said in April 2008. "They're also feeding on anti-Muslim sentiment and that's also wrong. We don't have a religious test in this country. I want to make sure that nobody gets hoodwinked and if anybody gets that information, make sure to correct it."

Obama's grandfather, Hussein Onyango Obama, was a prominent Kenyan farmer, a Luo tribe elder and a medicine man. Obama's father, Barack Hussein Obama Sr., was also born in a village in Kenya, where he was raised a Muslim. He was selected by Kenyan leaders and American sponsors to attend the University of Hawaii as the first African student there. By the time he met and married Obama's mother, Ann Dunham, an 18-year-old university student, he was an atheist. In a chapter in The Audacity of Hope titled "Faith," Obama wrote that his father believed "religion to be so much superstition, like the mumbo-jumbo of witch doctors that he had witnessed in the Kenyan villages of his youth."
Obama's father accepted a scholarship to Harvard University to pursue his doctorate without the resources to take his new family with him. Obama was 2 years old when his parents divorced. Although he and his father communicated through letters, Obama saw him only one other time, at age 10. Obama's father died in a car accident in 1982, when Obama was 21 years old.
In a June 2007 keynote address at the annual United Church of Christ General Synod, Obama described his mother, a Kansas native who became an anthropologist, as "one of the most spiritual souls I ever knew. She had this enormous capacity for wonder, and lived by the Golden Rule. But she had a healthy skepticism of religion as an institution." In The Audacity of Hope, Obama added, "For my mother, organized religion too often dressed up closed-mindedness in the garb of piety, cruelty and oppression in the cloak of righteousness."
Obama's mother married Lolo Soetoro, an Indonesian businessman and non-practicing Muslim, and the family moved to Jakarta, Indonesia, when Obama was 6 years old. There, he attended a Catholic private school and later a predominantly Muslim public school. At an April 2008 forum for the Democratic presidential primary candidates that focused on the topic of faith and values, Obama said, "The brand of Islam that was being practiced in Indonesia at the time was a very tolerant Islam," which "taught me … that Islam can be compatible with the modern world."
When Obama was 10 years old, he returned to Hawaii to live with his maternal grandparents, Stanley and Madelyn Dunham, while his mother -- who wanted him to receive an American education -- remained in Indonesia. Obama has written that his grandmother was raised with a "straight-backed form of Methodism that valued reason over passion and temperance over both," while his grandfather came from a family of "decent, God-fearing Baptists." But neither grandparent continued to practice his or her childhood faith. In his 1995 book, Dreams from My Father, Obama wrote that "Gramps" briefly enrolled the family in a local Unitarian Universalist congregation because, in his grandfather's words, " 'It's like you get five religions in one.' " In The Audacity of Hope, Obama wrote that "religious faith never really took root in their [his grandparents'] hearts."
Both grandparents were proud when Obama, then known as "Barry" Obama, was accepted to a prestigious private high school, Punahou School, founded by missionaries in 1841. Obama graduated in 1979.
In 1985, Obama moved to Chicago to work for the faith-based Developing Communities Project. As Obama explained in his June 2007 speech at the United Church of Christ General Synod:
It's around this time that some pastors I was working with came up to me and asked if I was a member of a church. "If you're organizing churches," they said, "it might be helpful if you went to church once in a while." And I thought, "Well, I guess that makes sense."
So one Sunday, I put on one of the few clean jackets I had, and went over to Trinity United Church of Christ on 95th Street on the South Side of Chicago. And I heard [the] Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright deliver a sermon called "The Audacity of Hope." And during the course of that sermon, he introduced me to someone named Jesus Christ. I learned that my sins could be redeemed. I learned that those things I was too weak to accomplish myself, He would accomplish with me if I placed my trust in Him. And in time, I came to see faith as more than just a comfort to the weary or a hedge against death, but rather as an active, palpable agent in the world and in my own life.

Trinity, which describes itself as "unashamedly black and unapologetically Christian," embraces black liberation theology. Influenced by the civil rights struggles of the 1960s, black liberation theology advocates a black-centered Christianity focused on eradicating racism and poverty. At the April 2008 candidates' forum on faith and values, Obama said he was attracted to Trinity and to Wright's sermons because they "spoke directly to the social gospel, the need to act and not just to sit in the pews."
While at Harvard Law School (1988-1991), Obama listened to recordings of Wright's sermons. After law school, Obama returned to Chicago and reconnected with the church. Wright was the first person Obama thanked when he won his U.S. Senate seat in 2004.

Obama has challenged some on the political left who advocate a strict secularism in public life. At the June 2006 Sojourners/Call to Renewal conference, Obama said that "the discomfort of some progressives with any hint of religion has often prevented us from effectively addressing issues in moral terms. Some of the problem here is rhetorical -- if we scrub language of all religious content, we forfeit the imagery and terminology through which millions of Americans understand both their personal morality and social justice."
In his 2007 address at the United Church of Christ General Synod, Obama gave an overview of how religion has been a part of American political history, reminding the audience that "men and women of faith waded into the battles over prison reform and temperance, public education and women's rights -- and above all, abolition."
"So doing the Lord's work," Obama added later in the speech, "is a thread that's run through our politics since the very beginning. And it puts the lie to the notion that the separation of church and state in America means faith should have no role in public life. Imagine [President] Lincoln's Second Inaugural [Address] without its reference to 'the judgments of the Lord.' Or [Martin Luther] King's 'I Have a Dream' speech without its reference to 'all of God's children.' Or President Kennedy's Inaugural [Address] without the words, 'here on Earth, God's work must truly be our own.' At each of these junctures, by summoning a higher truth and embracing a universal faith, our leaders inspired ordinary people to achieve extraordinary things."
Obama's faith has inspired both his religious life and public life. More than once, he has told the story of the pivotal period in his life when he came to faith on Chicago's South Side. "It was powerful for me," he told a Chicago Sun-Times reporter in a 2004 interview, describing the experience, "because it not only confirmed my faith, it not only gave shape to my faith, but I think, also, allowed me to connect the work I had been pursuing with my faith."
This religious biography was researched and written by Anne Farris, a Washington-based journalist, and Mark O'Keefe, Associate Director, Web Editorial, Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life.
Photo credits: AP, Getty Images
Abortion
Obama supports abortion rights. On Jan. 23, during his first week as president, Obama signed an executive order restoring federal funding for international organizations that perform or promote abortions in foreign countries. During the October 15, 2008 presidential debate, Obama expressed a willingness to support a ban on late-term abortions "as long as there's an exception for the mother's health and life." During an April 2007 Democratic debate, Obama said, "I trust women to make these decisions in conjunction with their doctors and their families and their clergy." At an April 2008 candidates' forum on faith and compassion, Obama said that "there is a moral dimension to abortion, which I think that all too often those of us who are pro-choice have not talked about or tried to tamp down." To reduce abortions, Obama advocates a comprehensive sex-education program in which both abstinence and contraception are priorities. He also says, "we should make sure that adoption is an option."
Compare McCain and Obama
Church and State
Obama says he believes in the importance of the separation of church and state but has said that a "sense of proportion" should guide how it is enforced. He says that the phrase "under God" in the pledge of allegiance and voluntary student prayer groups on school property are two examples where conflict between church and state has been alleged but should be less strictly policed. At an April 2008 candidates' forum on faith and compassion, he described the issue as "a false debate" and challenged Democrats to "get in church, reach out to evangelicals [and] link faith with the work that we do." He says that while both non-religious and religious people have a right to the public square, "those of us of religious faith [have to] translate our language into a universal language that can appeal to everybody."
Compare McCain and Obama
Death Penalty
Obama has written that he thinks the death penalty "does little to deter crime." He supports capital punishment in cases in which "the community is justified in expressing the full measure of its outrage." While a state senator, Obama pushed for reform of the Illinois capital punishment system and authored a bill to mandate the videotaping of interrogations and confessions. Obama disagreed with the June 25, 2008 U.S. Supreme Court decision outlawing the execution of child rapists.
Compare McCain and Obama
Education
In a February 2008 interview Obama said he supports charter schools "as a way to foster competition in the public school system," and later he said he would double federal funding for charter schools if elected president. During the third presidential debate Obama said he does not support the use of government vouchers to attend private schools "because the data doesn't show that it actually solves the problem." In an April forum with other Democratic candidates, Obama said he believes in both evolution and the biblical story of creation and does not "think science generally is incompatible with Christian faith."
Compare McCain and Obama
Environment
Obama opposes drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge "because it would irreversibly damage a protected national wildlife refuge without creating sufficient oil supplies to meaningfully affect the global market price," but has said he would consider using offshore drilling as part of a "comprehensive energy policy that can bring down gas prices." He says that religion can encourage people to make sacrifices, and he hopes to rally other countries around the "importance of us being good stewards of the land." In October 2007, Obama proposed an energy plan that would require polluters to pay for their emissions via a "cap and trade" system and that would implement a national carbon emissions cap. In the U.S. Senate, Obama has co-sponsored the Climate Stewardship and Innovation Act to cap emissions from industrial plants and oil refineries. He supported a January 2007 meeting of a group of evangelicals and climate scientists to advocate measures to prevent global warming. Obama has also called for stricter restrictions on the amount of carbon in fuels and tougher fuel efficiency standards for cars. He plans to allocate $150 billion over the next 10 years to create a "green energy sector" that would support up to five million new jobs.
Compare McCain and Obama
Faith-Based Initiatives
In a July 2008 speech, Obama announced a plan to establish a Council for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships. It would expand upon President Bush's faith-based initiative, primarily by allocating $500 million per year for summer learning camps that would aim to narrow the achievement gap between poor and wealthy students. Under Obama's plan, groups receiving federal funding would not be allowed to take religion into account in hiring.
Compare McCain and Obama
Gay Marriage
Obama says that he personally believes that "marriage is between a man and a woman" but also says that "equality is a moral imperative" for gay and lesbian Americans. He advocates the complete repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) because "federal law should not discriminate in any way against gay and lesbian couples, which is precisely what DOMA does." He supports granting civil unions for gay couples, and in 2006 he opposed a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage. In March 2007, Obama initially avoided answering questions about a controversial statement by a U.S. general that "homosexual acts" are "immoral," but Obama later told CNN's Larry King, "I don't think that homosexuals are immoral any more than I think heterosexuals are immoral."
Compare McCain and Obama
Health Care
When he formally declared his run for the presidency, Obama said his goal was to implement universal health care, or government health insurance for all Americans, by 2012 or "the end of the first term of the next president." He has called "belief in universal health" care one of the "core values" of the Democratic Party. Obama proposes a national health care plan, similar to that available to federal employees, that would allow individuals and businesses to buy health care. The plan would mandate coverage for children but not for adults and would be funded in part by projected revenue from allowing President Bush's tax cuts to expire.
Compare McCain and Obama
Immigration
Obama says that "the time to fix our broken immigration system is now." He supports reform that provides "stronger enforcement on the border" by adding personnel, infrastructure and technology. To remove the incentives for people to enter the country illegally, he wants to "crack down on employers that hire undocumented immigrants." To help businesses know who they are hiring, Obama supports a congressional proposal that would create a new employment eligibility verification system so employers can verify that their employees are legally eligible to work in the U.S. He says he will "not support any bill that does not provide [an] earned path to citizenship for the undocumented population." He has been a proponent of guest-worker programs that first offer available jobs to American workers.
Compare McCain and Obama
Iraq War
Obama was an opponent of the war effort as an Illinois state senator, arguing that the fight in Afghanistan should be finished before the U.S. embarked on a "dumb" and "rash" war. He campaigned against the war in his 2004 U.S. Senate bid. In his presidential campaign, he made his opposition to the war a central theme, telling voters that "they should ask themselves: Who got the single most important foreign policy decision since the end of the Cold War right, and who got it wrong?" During his campaign, Obama said he would remove one to two combat brigades each month and have all U.S. combat brigades out of Iraq within 16 months of taking office.
Compare McCain and Obama
Poverty
In the Illinois Senate, Obama helped author the state earned income tax credit, which provided tax cuts for low-income families. In September 2007, Obama unveiled a plan to cut taxes for the middle class and senior citizens by eliminating corporate loopholes and tax breaks. He said that if elected president, he would aim to create 20 "Promise Neighborhoods," choosing places that have high levels of poverty and crime and low levels of academic achievement. In those neighborhoods, "a full network of services" will be provided "from birth to college." In The Audacity of Hope, Obama describes what he calls America's "empathy deficit," writing that a "stronger sense of empathy would tilt the balance of our current politics in favor of those people who are struggling in this society." Obama is a U.S. Senate co-sponsor of the Global Poverty Act, which calls on the president to develop a comprehensive agenda to cut extreme global poverty in half by 2015. He has supported bills increasing the minimum wage.
Compare McCain and Obama
Stem Cell Research
Obama supports relaxing federal restrictions on embryonic stem cell research. He voted for the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2005, which was vetoed by President Bush. The bill would have allowed federal funding to be used for research on stem cell lines obtained from discarded human embryos originally created for fertility treatments.
Compare McCain and Obama
Nov. 5, 2008
How the Faithful Voted
Among nearly every religious group, Barack Obama received equal or higher levels of support compared with John Kerry. Still, a sizeable gap persists between Obama's support among white evangelical Protestants and his support among the religiously unaffiliated. Similarly, a sizeable gap exists between those who attend religious services regularly and those who attend less often.
Nov. 2, 2008
Trends in Presidential Candidate Preferences Among Religious Groups
Charts tracking Pew Research Center surveys show trends in support of Barack Obama and John McCain by white evangelicals, black Protestants and other religious groups throughout the campaign. View the graphic
Oct. 27, 2008
McCain Retains Support of Highly Religious White Voters
A Gallup update based on more than 21,000 interviews conducted as part of Gallup Poll Daily tracking in October shows that registered voters' religious intensity continues to be a powerful predictor of their presidential vote choice.
Read the report at gallup.com
Oct. 22, 2008
How Church Attendance Affects Religious Voting Patterns
The latest report from the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press shows that, as in previous elections, differences in voting patterns by religion are amplified when church attendance is taken into account.
View the graphic
Oct. 21, 2008
Growing Doubts About McCain's Judgment, Age and Campaign Conduct
Barack Obama's lead over John McCain has steadily increased since mid-September, when the race was essentially even.
Read the report at people-press.org
Oct. 21, 2008
Hispanic Voters Divided by Religion
Taken as a group, Hispanic voters solidly support Barack Obama over John McCain for president, but there is a significant difference in the Hispanic vote by religion.
Read the report at gallup.com
Sept. 25, 2008
Nearly Half of Americans Don't Know Obama is a Christian
A mid-September survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press shows nearly half of Americans (46%) are unable to correctly identify Barack Obama as a Christian, including 13% who still maintain that he is a Muslim and another 16% who say they have heard different things about his religion.
Go to the Pew Research Center's Daily Number
Sept. 5, 2008
Religion Remains Major Dividing Factor Among White Voters
John McCain's lead over Barack Obama among highly religious white voters, currently 65% to 26%, has been quite stable all summer and has not yet changed with the selection of Sarah Palin as his vice-presidential running mate.
Read the report at gallup.com
Aug. 21, 2008
More Americans Question Religion's Role in Politics
Some Americans are having a change of heart about mixing religion and politics. A new survey finds a narrow majority of the public saying that churches and other houses of worship should keep out of political matters and not express their views on day-to-day social and political matters.
Read the report
Aug. 13, 2008
White Evangelicals Help McCain Close Gap
With fewer than two weeks to go before the start of the presidential nominating conventions, McCain has solidified his support among Republicans and white evangelicals, especially in the South, while Obama lags in attracting Clinton supporters.
Read the report
July 17, 2008
McCain's Lead Among Evangelicals Smaller than Bush's in '04
John McCain has a smaller lead among white evangelical Protestants than George W. Bush had at a similar point in the 2004 campaign, even though Barack Obama has made few inroads into this key constituency. Religiously unaffiliated voters, however, strongly favor the Democratic candidate.
Read the report
July 15, 2008
Belief Obama Is Muslim Is Durable, Bipartisan
The inaccurate belief that Barack Obama is Muslim appears to have virtually no effect on Republican voters. But Democrats who share the misperception are significantly less likely to support him, according to an analysis by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.
Read the report
July 10, 2008
Likely Rise In Voter Turnout Bodes Well For Democrats
Even with a partisan enthusiasm gap, voter interest is already as high as in November of recent elections, two trends that may significantly alter the composition of the eventual electorate in the Democrats' favor.
Read the report
July 8, 2008
Religious Intensity Predicts Support for McCain
Americans who say religion is an important part of their daily lives support John McCain over Barack Obama for president, 50% to 40%, while their less religious counterparts support Obama over McCain, 55% to 36%.
Read the report at gallup.com
March 27, 2008
Obama Weathers the Wright Storm, Clinton Faces Credibility Problem
Obama's personal image remains more favorable than Clinton's - and he retains a 10-point advantage over her in the race for the nomination. But certain beliefs and attitudes among older, white, working-class Democrats are associated with his lower levels of support among this group.
Read the report
March 27, 2008
Obama and Wright Controversy Dominate News Cycle
Barack Obama's March 18th speech on race and politics is arguably the biggest political event of the campaign so far. Fully 85% of Americans say they heard at least a little about Obama's speech, and most (54%) say they heard a lot about it.
Read the report
March 6, 2008
'Purple' states turn a little more 'blue'
The national polls point to a tight presidential race in November. But Democrats have a bit more to cheer about than Republicans do, regardless of who wins the Democratic primary, according to the latest state-by-state electoral-vote projections.
Read the report
Feb. 28, 2008
Obama Has The Lead, But Potential Problems Too
Barack Obama is riding high as the March 4 primaries approach. Obama has moved out to a broad-based advantage over Hillary Clinton in the national Democratic primary contest and holds a 50%-43% lead over John McCain in a general election matchup.
Read the report
Feb. 3, 2008
McCain's Support Soars, Democratic Race Tightens
Barack Obama and John McCain have made significant gains in support as the field of candidates has narrowed in both parties. John McCain now leads 42%-22% over Mitt Romney among Republican voters nationally.
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Jan. 16, 2008
In GOP Primaries: Three Victors, Three Constituencies
The Republican nomination contest is being increasingly shaped by ideology and religion as it moves toward the Super Tuesday states on Feb. 5. The Democratic nomination contest is being affected by different dynamics than the GOP race – class, race and gender.
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Nov. 7, 2007
Religious Groups' Presidential Candidate Preferences
A new analysis of recent surveys show Hillary Clinton and Rudy Giuliani as the preferred candidates among key religious groups. Giuliani, though, garners considerably less support from white evangelical Protestants than he does from white mainline Protestants and white Catholics.
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Sept. 6, 2007
Clinton and Giuliani Seen as Not Highly Religious; Romney's Religion Raises Concerns
A September survey finds that religion is not proving to be a clear-cut positive in the 2008 presidential campaign. The candidates viewed by voters as the least religious among the leading contenders are front-runners Hillary Clinton and Rudy Giuliani, while voters still express concern about Mitt Romney's Mormon faith. Read more about the 2008 election and religion.
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June 18, 2007
Analysis of Candidates' Potential Support among Religious Groups
A survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press examines potential support for the Democratic presidential candidates among Democratic and Democratic-leaning members of two religious groups: white Catholics and white mainline Protestants.