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Republican Base Heavily White, Conservative, Religious
Democrats are more likely to be
moderate or liberal, Hispanic, or black or other races
by Frank Newport
GALLUP Poll (June 1, 2009)
PRINCETON, NJ -- More than 6 in 10 Republicans today are white
conservatives, while most of the rest are whites with other ideological
leanings; only 11% of Republicans are Hispanics, or are blacks or
members of other races. By contrast, only 12% of Democrats are white
conservatives, while about half are white moderates or liberals and a
third are nonwhite.

These data reinforce the
basic challenge facing the Republican Party today as it ponders how
best to remedy a situation that finds Democrats in control of the White
House and both houses of Congress. Republicans have a clear monopoly on
the allegiance of white conservative Americans, but the GOP's challenge
is figuring out whether this is enough of a base on which to build for
the future. The alternative is for the GOP to broaden its base to
include more minorities and/or more whites who are moderate or liberal
in their ideological outlook -- groups now predominantly loyal to the
Democratic Party.
The current analysis is based on a sample of more than 26,000
interviews Gallup
conducted May 1-27, 2009. Each of the three major political groupings
-- those who identify themselves as Republicans, as Democrats, and as
independents -- was decomposed into five mutually exclusive and
exhaustive categories:
1. Hispanics
2. Non-Hispanic blacks
3. Non-Hispanics who identity their race as something other than
white or black
4. Non-Hispanic whites who identify themselves as conservative
5. Non-Hispanic whites who identify their ideology as something
other than conservative -- including moderates, liberals, and those who
don't express an ideological preference
The results show clearly that the Republican Party today is first and
foremost a political entity dominated by white Americans. Eighty-nine
percent of rank-and-file Republicans are non-Hispanic whites, leaving
just 5% who are Hispanic (of any race), 2% who are black, and 4% of
other races.
Further, by well over a 2-to-1 ratio, whites who identify as
Republicans claim a conservative, rather than a moderate or liberal,
ideology (or have no opinion when asked about their ideology).
Democrats have a significantly more diverse party composition. Well
over a third (36%) of Democrats are nonwhite (Hispanic, or black or
some other race) and the 64% of Democrats who are white are strongly
skewed -- by more than a 4-to-1 ratio -- toward an ideological position
that is moderate or liberal rather than conservative.
Independents, as would be expected, are somewhere between Republicans
and Democrats in terms of their racial, ethnic, and ideological
composition. Twenty-seven percent of independents are Hispanic, or are
black or identify with another race, and, by about a 2-to-1 ratio,
white independents split toward the nonconservative
ideological position.
Religiosity
A similar pattern is found when the three partisan groups are broken
down into segments based on race, ethnicity, and religious intensity
(among whites, as measured by church attendance).

About half of Republicans are non-Hispanic whites who are strongly
religious, defined as those who attend church about once a week or more
frequently. Forty percent of Republicans are whites who attend less
frequently.
Democrats, on the other hand, comprise only 20% highly religious
whites, with more than twice as many whites who attend church less
frequently. The pattern of church attendance among independents is
similar to that among Democrats, but independents have higher
percentages of whites in both the religious and the nonreligious
categories.
Implications
A great deal of attention has been paid to the plight of Republicans
who at this juncture in history find themselves not controlling the
presidency, the House, or the Senate. Plus, numerous surveys conducted
by Gallup and other firms have shown
that the GOP appears to be suffering on a number of perceptual
dimensions compared to the Democrats (as measured by Gallup and by other recent surveys).
The data reviewed here highlight an essential dilemma the Republicans
face as they ponder their future. The Republican Party's constituency
is overwhelmingly white -- and the significant majority of those whites
are ideologically conservative, while a majority are
highly religious, as defined by church attendance. The Democratic
Party, on the other hand, has more than three times the percentage of
nonwhites among its identifiers as does the GOP. And white Democrats
are much more likely to be moderate or liberal than conservative, and
are much more likely to be infrequent church attenders
rather than frequent church attenders.
Does the Republican Party in essence "stick to the knitting"
and cling to its core conservative principles? Or should the
Republicans make an effort to expand their base -- among whites who are
moderate or less religious, and/or the various nonwhite groups who to
this point are largely ignoring the Republican Party in favor of the
Democrats? The decision the party makes in response to this question
could be pivotal in helping determine its future.
Survey Methods
Results are based on telephone interviews with 26,314 national adults,
aged 18 and older, conducted May 1-27, 2009, as part of Gallup Poll
Daily tracking. For results based on the total sample of national
adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of
sampling error is ±1 percentage points.
Interviews are conducted with respondents on land-line telephones (for
respondents with a land-line telephone) and cellular phones (for
respondents who are cell-phone only).
In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical
difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the
findings of public opinion polls.
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