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Polling Evangelicals: Cut Aid to World's Poor, Unemployed

A Pew Research Center survey suggests evangelicals prefer the government spend on schools, the military, and police.

The House of Representatives is working day and night in its effort to cut more than $60 billion from the federal budget. The House is considering a continuing resolution, a bill used to fund the federal government for the remainder of the year. The bill includes deep cuts for environmental agencies, education, and foreign aid (except those related to security). It makes modest reductions for defense, homeland security, and police. These cuts are in line with the spending priorities of most American evangelicals.

The Pew Research Center for People and the Press released a February 10 survey of Americans on their budget priorities, in which they asked them whether they favored increasing, decreasing, or keeping current levels of spending in specific policy areas. Pew provided Christianity Today with a religious breakdown of questions on the budget and spending priorities.

Overall, evangelicals were more likely to favor reductions in federal spending, but like other Americans, they wanted most areas to remain the same or increased.

The top choices among evangelicals for the chopping block are economic assistance to needy people around the world (56 percent), government assistance for the unemployed (40 percent), and environmental protection (38 percent). In each of these categories, evangelicals were more supportive of decreasing spending than are other Americans. In fact, evangelicals were more supportive of funding cuts in every area except military defense, terrorism defense, aid to veterans, and energy.

In general, Americans are more in favor of spending increases, not decreases. Evangelicals were more likely to favor an increase in defense spending (45 percent) compared to non-evangelicals (28 percent). The largest gap between the two groups, however, was in areas related to education, an area the House bill targets for some its largest cuts.

When asked about "public schools," evangelicals supported increasing funding (48 percent), but this was 10 points lower than others' support for schools (58 percent). When asked about education funding in general (just "education"), 68 percent of non-evangelicals support increased spending compared to only 35 percent of evangelicals. Gaps appeared in other education areas including college financial aid (47 percent to 15 percent) and scientific research (39 percent to 16 percent).

Cutting foreign aid and support for the unemployed while favoring increases in defense and police are not priorities of all evangelicals.

Robert Zachritz, government relations director for World Vision in the U.S., said in a statement that U.S. programs help save lives worldwide. He said eight million children who die each year, lives that could be saved with low-cost aid programs to provide malaria bed nets or child immunizations. "World Vision recognizes the need to make tough decisions addressing the present fiscal crisis, including budget cuts, but these should not fall disproportionately on the poorest of the poor," Zachritz said. "Congress is considering an overall budget reduction of 8.8 percent from the FY 2011 presidential request, with cuts disproportionately made to the most cost-effective humanitarian programs saving children's lives."

Sojourners is lobbying against the House bill, asking people to ask, "What Would Jesus Cut?"

"The moral test of any society is how it treats its poorest and most vulnerable citizens. And that is exactly what the Bible says, over and over again," said Sojourners president Jim Wallis. "Taking the cutting knife to programs that benefit low-income people, while refusing to scrutinize the much larger blank checks we keep giving to defense contractors and corporate executives, is hypocritical and cruel. I'll go even further and say that such a twisted moral calculus for the nation's fiscal policy is simply not fair, and not right. It is not only bad economics, but also bad religion."


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Displaying 1–3 of 73 comments

Roger McKinney

March 04, 2011  2:05pm

No Biff, you're wrong. Even the most wealthy consume only a small part of their wealth, regardless of how lavish it is. The rest is invested in businesses creating jobs. And if jobs don't build communities I don't know what does. I have an MA in economics and has studied it for 30 years and taught it for several. I think I know how economies work. Christians like you don't.

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Biff Riggs

March 02, 2011  3:11pm

@Roger McKinney Your statement is a flat out error. The rich do not reinvest in communities, their wealth goes to fund shamelessly lavish lifestyles, take jobs overseas, and to make more, more, always more money. Your shameless groupie fawning over the rich, is disturbing, and show a profound lack of not only technical knowledge, but of how economics really work.

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Roger McKinney

March 02, 2011  12:18pm

Jacob, if the rich gave all that they had to the poor, we would have a nation of nothing but poor people. We know more about how economies work today than did the Church Fathers. In their day, the rich had huge stacks of gold sitting in warehouses doing nothing. No rich person does that today. All of their excess income is invested in job-creating businesses. Take that away and the poor will have no jobs. Besides, I doubt any of the Fathers thought the state should take from the rich and give to the poor. The survey shows the depths of economic ignorance among evangelicals. Most federal spending goes to the middle class, not the poor. The problems could easily be solved by taking away middle class welfare and keeping welfare for the poor.

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