Voters open to candidates who aren’t very religious

News

Voters open to candidates who aren’t very religious

But many see a role for religion in public life
According to a new poll, 49 percent of Americans want to see religion have some influence on education, 44 percent on health care policy, 43 percent on immigration, 38 percent on gun policy, 36 percent on income inequality, 34 percent on foreign policy and 32 percent on climate change.
Religious leaders pray with President Donald Trump after he signed a proclamation for a national day of prayer to occur Sept. 3, 2017, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.
State Rep. Ilhan Omar takes the oath of office as the 2017 Legislature convened in St. Paul, Minn. Omar, a Muslim, is the nation’s first Somali-American to be elected to a state legislature.

Voters open to candidates who aren’t very religious

According to a new poll, 49 percent of Americans want to see religion have some influence on education, 44 percent on health care policy, 43 percent on immigration, 38 percent on gun policy, 36 percent on income inequality, 34 percent on foreign policy and 32 percent on climate change.
Religious leaders pray with President Donald Trump after he signed a proclamation for a national day of prayer to occur Sept. 3, 2017, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.
State Rep. Ilhan Omar takes the oath of office as the 2017 Legislature convened in St. Paul, Minn. Omar, a Muslim, is the nation’s first Somali-American to be elected to a state legislature.