How did the Christian Right come to predominate in the
Republican Party? Why, on the other hand, do secular and
religiously liberal beliefs largely prevail in the Democratic
Party? Our understanding of the rift between the Democratic and
Republican parties -- a rift in many ways fueled by religious
beliefs -- requires an analysis of the entire spectrum of religious
and nonreligious players in the American political process and how
their influence has evolved over a long period of time.
Employing a sizeable collection of data on party members,
activists, and elites, Geoffrey Layman examines the role of
religion in the Democratic and Republican parties, and the ways in
which religion has influenced the political process from the early
1960s through the late 1990s. Using a wide variety of sources,
including the American National Election Studies -- the major
academic survey of the American electorate -- Layman reveals a vast
and subtly differentiated landscape of political life and a more
vivid basis upon which to analyze the ever-widening chasm between
the parties.
Layman investigates a broad spectrum of religious variety,
citing differences between African American Protestants, white
evangelical Protestants, Roman Catholics, Jews, nonreligious or
seculars, and smaller religious groups, as well as political
cleavages within these faith traditions. With his broad-based and
thorough analysis, he counters the often narrow focus and
incendiary rhetoric of many of the "culture war" debates.
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