A third of Americans now identify or sympathize with Christian nationalism, survey finds
Christian nationalism is now deeply entrenched inside today’s Republican Party, according to a sweeping 50-state survey.
Why it matters: The once-fringe ideology holds that the U.S. was founded as a Christian nation and should be governed according to strict Christian values, even as the country becomes less religious and more racially diverse.
- The divide reflects a broader clash over whether America’s future is pluralistic or rooted in a singular religious-national identity.
By the numbers: About one-third of Americans qualify as Christian nationalism “adherents” or “sympathizers,” a new survey released Tuesday by the nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute finds.
- 56% of all Republicans are Christian nationalism “adherents” or “sympathizers,” the survey said.
- Meanwhile, only 25% of independents and just 17% of Democrats are “adherents” or “sympathizers,” according to the survey.
State of play: Many adherents say the U.S. was founded as the “Promised Land” for white European Christians, and falsely believe the founding fathers sought to create a Christian nation, PRRI president Robert P. Jones tells Axios.
- Critics say Christian nationalism reinforces rigid, male-dominated leadership models in church, home and government, and merges religious identity with white ethnic nationalism.
- It also elevates Christianity — often a specific conservative Protestant expression — above other faiths.