Episode Details
Back to EpisodesThe Burge Report: The Democrats Have a Religion Problem (Does It Matter?)
Description
In this episode, we look at Ryan Burge’s latest analysis showing how the modern Democratic coalition is being pulled apart by widening religious divides. While Republicans continue to draw support from a largely Christian voter base, Democrats now include two groups with opposite religious profiles: highly secular white voters and deeply religious voters of color. This creates major messaging and policy tensions within the party, tensions that didn’t exist at the same scale in earlier decades.
1. White Democrats Have Become Majority Non-Religious
White Democrats shifted dramatically from being majority Christian in 2008 to majority non-religious in 2024, a complete reversal in just 16 years. This is the most secular major voting bloc in American politics today.
2. Democrats of Color Remain Significantly More Religious
Black, Hispanic, and Asian Democrats attend church more often, place higher importance on religion, and are more likely to identify as Christian. Their religious profile mirrors the “average American” much more closely than white Democrats do.
3. These Religious Differences Create Major Ideological Splits
Non-religious white Democrats take far more progressive positions than religious Democrats of color, leading to internal policy conflicts.
4. Democrats Cannot Build a Winning Strategy on Secular Voters Alone
With the U.S. still roughly 60% Christian, Democrats risk alienating either secular whites or religious voters of color, depending on how they frame their messaging.
Resources:
- “The Vanishing Church: How the Hollowing Out of Moderate Congregations Is Hurting Democracy, Faith, and Us” by Ryan Burge (affiliate link)
- “Summer for the Gods: The Scopes Trial and America’s Continuing Debate Over Science and Religion” by Edward Larson (affiliate link)
Episode Sponsors:
Love PodBriefly?
If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.
Support Us