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Sixty-eight percent of Americans oppose denying communion to such politicians; that includes 72 percent of all Catholics and a similar number of churchgoing Catholics. Even among Americans who oppose legal abortion, 57 percent reject the idea of denying communion to Catholic politicians who hold the opposite view.
These sentiments fit with broader public views: Nearly-two thirds of Americans say religious leaders in general should not attempt to influence politicians' positions on the issues. Again Catholics mirror the overall population 65 percent share this view although there are broad differences among other population groups.
The nexus of religion and politics tends to draw increased focus in election years. President Bush meets today with Pope John Paul II in Rome. And in Washington, Cardinal Theodore McCarrick is leading a task force of bishops examining, among other matters, whether Catholic politicians who differ with church teachings should receive communion. Bush's Democratic opponent, John Kerry, a Catholic, supports legal abortion.
Support for banning communion is highest, not among Catholics, but among evangelical white Protestants who describe themselves as political conservatives. In this group it's an even split: 41 percent support denying communion, 42 percent oppose it.
Religious Influence
There also are wide divisions on the broader issue of whether religious leaders should try to influence politicians. Liberals, Easterners, senior citizens, Democrats and the non-religious are among those most likely to say no. Republicans and conservatives divide, while a majority of conservative evangelical Protestants favors such efforts.
 Should Politicians Who Support Abortion Be Denied Holy Communion?
ABC News/Washington Post poll  |
| | YES | NO |
| All | 22% | 68 |
| Catholics | 22 | 72 |
Catholic Church-Goers | 27 | 68 | |
These views play out in vote preferences: People who say religious leaders should try to influence politicians support Bush over Kerry by 21 points in a three-way matchup including Ralph Nader; those who disagree support Kerry over Bush by 11 points.
An ABC News/Washington Post poll probed the so-called "culture war" with another question last December: Fifty-four percent of Americans said a president should not rely on his religious beliefs in making policy decisions, while 40 percent said he should. This, too, revealed deep splits among population groups, but again with Catholics reflecting the broader majority's view (60 percent said a president should not be influenced by his religious views). In contrast to evangelical white Protestants, most Catholics long have separated religion and politics in this way.
Abortion
On abortion itself, 54 percent of Americans say it should be legal, about the average in polls since 1995. That includes 23 percent who say it should be legal in all cases, and 31 percent who say it should be legal in most cases.
 Should Church Leaders Try to Influence Politicians?
ABC News/Washington Post poll  |
| | YES | NO |
| All | 35% | 64 |
| No Religion | 22 | 77 |
| Catholics | 34 | 65 |
| Evangelical Protestants | 43 | 56 |
Conservative Evangelical Protestants | 55 | 45 | |
Support for legal abortion is higher in the East (62 percent) and West (61 percent) than in the Midwest (52 percent) or South (46 percent). It jumps above 70 percent among liberals and non-evangelical white Protestants. Most Republicans, conservatives and evangelical white Protestants oppose it, peaking at 78 percent among evangelical white Protestants who attend church weekly (including four in 10 who are opposed in all cases).
Despite their church's stand on the issue, Catholics support legal abortion at the same rate as the broader public overall 55 percent say it should be legal in all or most cases. However, legal abortion is opposed by 55 percent of Catholics who attend church at least a few times a month.
 Should Religious Leaders Try to Influence Politicians' Positions on the Issues?  |
| | YES | NO |
| All | 35 | 64 |
| | | |
| Democrats | 28 | 71 |
| Independents | 32 | 67 |
| Republicans | 48 | 50 |
| | | |
| Liberals | 23 | 77 |
| Moderates | 29 | 69 |
| Conservatives | 49 | 49 |
| | | |
| No Religion | 22 | 77 |
| Catholics | 34 | 65 |
| Non-evangelical Protestants | 27 | 70 |
| Evangelical Protestants | 43 | 56 |
| | | |
| White Protestants: | | |
| Evangelical | 46 | 53 |
| Church-going evangelical | 53 | 46 |
Conservative evangelical | 62 | 37 | |
While there's not much of a gender gap on the issue of abortion among all Americans, there is among Catholics. Sixty-three percent of Catholic women support legal abortion; it's 48 percent among Catholic men. Still, Catholic men and women alike broadly oppose denying communion to Catholic politicians who support legal abortion.
Groups
On average in ABC/Post polls the past year, Protestants have accounted for 48 percent of the adult population, Catholics 22 percent, other Christians 12 percent, those with no religion 13 percent and all others 5 percent. Among Protestants, 57 percent describe themselves as evangelical or born again (computing to 27 percent of all Americans), while 40 percent of Protestants are non-evangelical (19 percent of all adults).
 Abortion Should Be  |
| | Legal | Illegal |
| All | 54 | 44 |
| HS or less | 48 | 49 |
| Some college + | 59 | 39 |
| | | |
| East | 62 | 35 |
| West | 61 | 38 |
| Midwest | 52 | 46 |
| South | 46 | 51 |
| | | |
| Democrats | 62 | 35 |
| Independents | 56 | 43 |
| Republicans | 40 | 50 |
| | | |
| Liberals | 77 | 21 |
| Moderates | 60 | 37 |
| Conservatives | 34 | 64 |
| | | |
| No Religion | 68 | 30 |
| Catholics | 55 | 42 |
| Non-evangelical Protestants | 69 | 29 |
| Evangelical Protestants | 35 | 63 |
| | | |
| White Protestants: | | |
| Evangelical | 35 | 64 |
| Church-going evangelical | 20 | 78 |
| Conservative evangelical | 21 | 77 |
| | | |
| Catholics: | | |
| Regular churchgoers | 45 | 55 |
Not regular churchgoers | 67 | 29 | |
Methodology
This ABC News/Washington Post poll was conducted by telephone May 20-23 among a random national sample of 1,005 adults. The results have a three-point error margin. Sampling, data collection and tabulation conducted by TNS of Horsham, Pa.
Previous ABC News polls can be found in our Poll Vault. 
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