Washinton, USA - Beyond the number of delegates and size of their fundraising efforts, there's another large gap between Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum: their views of whether there’s too much religion in politics.
A poll by the Pew Research Center's Forum on Religion and Public Life has found that nearly 60% of Romney supporters believe that churches should step back from political and social issues, while 60% of Santorum supporters believe churches should play a more active role.
These sentiments were echoed by another sharp divide found between the candidates' supporters regarding their views on whether there's too little expression of religious faith by political leaders. For Romney's camp, there's little concern, with 24% agreeing that there's not enough religious discourse. But 55% of Santorum supporters see a deficit in religious speech by politicians.
As for the nation on a whole, the poll unearthed another interesting trend. The largest number of Americans in the poll's 10-year history believe there is too much expression of religious faith by politicians. In 2010, the last national election year, 37% said there was too little expression compared to 29% saying there was too much. Now, the numbers are nearly reversed, at 30% and 38% respectively.
Democrats were found to be nearly twice as likely as Republicans to say there's too much talk of religion by politicians, 46% to 24%. Among white evangelicals, Santorum’s most prominent base of supporters, only 14% thought politicians focused on religion too much. As such, it comes as no surprise that 54% see the Republican Party as being friendly toward religion, compared to 35% for Democrats.
The largest divides in the poll were on President Obama's perceived friendliness to religion. A majority of Republicans, 52%, categorize him as unfriendly, compared to 5% of Democrats, while 15% of Republicans see him as friendly, compared to 59% percent of Democrats.
The poll was conducted between March 7-11 with 1,503 individual interviews and has a sampling error of 3 percentage points.