Christian voters

Approval Rate: 58%

58%Approval ratio

Reviews 25

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  • by

    abichara

    Fri Nov 20 2009

    McCain has never been a darling of the fundamentalist crowd, nor has he ever put his religion on his sleeve. Bush was definitely closer to them. I consider this a non-factor either way.

  • by

    ladyjesusfan77_7

    Fri Nov 20 2009

    The only thing that I know is McCain claimed no Christianity at all, yet is Republican. Obama, on the other hand, has claimed Christianity. Now I am not saying one way or the other whether Obama is a Christian or not, because I really don't know. I am not his judge, and neither is anyone else. So the Christian voters really didn't have much to go on. I myself have said this before, but I voted for neither candidate.

  • by

    tootiebug

    Wed May 20 2009

    This statement is not one of Christian beliefs!

  • by

    blondie

    Sun Apr 26 2009

    I'm american!!!And proud

  • by

    genghisthehun

    Sat Apr 04 2009

    Enough of the Christian vote went to Barack Hussein to determine the result.

  • by

    angelique_249

    Fri Mar 20 2009

    No one ever plays a part... Get that through your heads.... It's a set up.

  • by

    eric_offshore_drilling_is_cool

    Mon Feb 23 2009

    As a Christian I must say I am pro-life. But Christans who stand outside of abortion clinics yelling at people getting abortions and saying things such as "You are going to hell" is a disgrace because that is not how you are to treat people. Christians as myself sin like everyone else so they have no right to hate someone for having an abortion. Hate the sin not the sinner cause your one to. Whether they play'd a big role in the election I am unsure of. Probably not so 3 stars.

  • by

    jglscd35

    Mon Feb 16 2009

    If my daughter ever held up a sign like that, she would never be able to sit down again. I hate people that hate America, regardless of their religion, creed, or color.

  • by

    astromike

    Thu Jan 15 2009

    I know alot of people on RIA associate them as fanatics, or whacos. Truth is most of us are normal decent people, who just have good morals.

  • by

    raise_awareness_of_poverty_hunger_in_america

    Sun Jan 11 2009

    Holding onto old beliefs sometimes is a negative.

  • by

    jesse_and_jacelyn

    Fri Jan 02 2009

    I AM A CHRISTIAN VOTER! BUT I DONT THINK GOD HATES AMERICA...B/C NOT ALL AMERICANS ARE DOING WRONG...ALOT OF US TRY TO DO RIGHT!!! I THINK IT HAD A DOWNFALL B/C ALOT OF PPL. WANT GAYS TO GET MARRIED AND CHRISTIANS DONT BELIEVE THAT BEING GAY IS RIGHT!! ALSO WE DONT BELIEVE IN TAKING GOD OUT OF AMERICA OR OFF OF THE MONEY...B/C IN GOD WE ALL DO TRUST AND IF YOU DONT ,YOU SHOULD!!

  • by

    rovert_or_trevor

    Fri Jan 02 2009

    Ya I think a lot of them started voting with the rest of the people instead of voting on what they were born and raised knowing to be right.

  • by

    marilynmonroeb_ot

    Tue Nov 18 2008

    who cares about christians. they need to chill the hell out

  • by

    twansalem

    Wed Nov 12 2008

    Apparently not big enough.

  • by

    chalky

    Mon Nov 10 2008

    Honestly, I don't know how much of an impact Christian Slater had on this election.

  • by

    drummond

    Sun Nov 09 2008

    This is an untold story. Obama actually did very well with evangelicals, much better than Kerry.

  • by

    puszaeac

    Fri Nov 07 2008

    HAHAHAHAHA! Christains... rofl

  • by

    fitman

    Wed Nov 05 2008

    It all depends on one's definition of Christian.If we include all voters who identify as Christian, I suspect Obama got a majority.

  • by

    lmorovan

    Wed Nov 05 2008

    80 million confessed Christians should have sent a strong message to America: we do not want a President who supports abortion, gay rights, sex education even to kindergarten kids, intrussion of government in the matters of faith, etc. But I guess Christians were more concerned with an economy, that sooner or later would recover, than the loss of millions of unborn children which could never be recovered. Mamon has won. Update: I strongly resent the image that accompanies this topic. God doesn't hate America.

  • by

    oscargamblesfr_o

    Wed Nov 05 2008

    Less of a factor than I thought they would be, and what's particularly surprising is that Obama took some states in which there's a lot of them.

  • by

    molfan

    Wed Nov 05 2008

    I am aware that deeply christian voters have in the past. i do not decide whether a candidate is deeply religious the number one factor if i vote for them. I look at most of the other issues, like their stand on health care, abortion, immigration, taxes, should we be in war or not, etc. asking how religious they are is not a big factor to me. i do know people such as my brother in law who determines how Christian a candidate is before he would consider voting for them. Not me.too many other issues I am more interested in.

  • by

    victor83

    Wed Nov 05 2008

    My parents are southern white Christians (for many of you here- the trifecta of evil) and they voted for Obama. This whole "religious right" thing was BS to start with. Obama's victory, at least in part, proves it.

  • by

    mariusqeldroma

    Wed Nov 05 2008

    Haven't seen the hard facts on which way every voting bloc swung, but I would bet this was a factor asmuch as anything else.

  • by

    numbah16tdhaha

    Wed Nov 05 2008

    I think religious folk are gonna break slightly one way, but I wouldn't call them a game changer in this outcome. They could have been, though...

  • by

    canadasucks

    Tue Nov 04 2008

    The phone rang and I was waken up to the news that I already knew concerning an election that was already over.  Considering this list- the krischun voters obviously voted for the guy who some repubs thought was really a Muslim!

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