ARTICLE

Vast Foreign Policy & Religious Gaps Between Harris And Trump Supporters

News Image By JNS.org August 28, 2024
Share this article:

Among the large differences between supporters of U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump are gulfs in religious and foreign policy values, according to a new analysis from the Pew Research Center.

Asked whether Washington should take the interests of allies into account "even if it means making compromises with them," 79% of Harris supporters and 40% of Trump supporters said it ought to do so. 

A much larger percentage of Trump supporters (76%) than Harris supporters (55%) said that "U.S. policies should try to keep it so America is the only military superpower," with 42% of Harris supporters, and just 22% of Trump supporters, saying that "it would be acceptable if another country became as militarily powerful as the U.S."

The Pew analysis was based on two surveys--held between April 8 and Aug. 14, and Aug. 5 and Aug. 11--of 4,527 registered voters.


An overwhelming majority (83%) of Trump supporters and 68% of Harris supporters said that a strong U.S. military makes the world safer. A quarter of Harris supporters said that a strong U.S. military has no impact on how safe the world is.

There was also a wide divide on the degree to which the United States ought to engage actively in world affairs. One in five Trump supporters and 33% of Harris supporters said that was "extremely important." Some 53% of Trump supporters and 71% of Harris supporters said it was at least "very important" for Washington to engage actively on a global scale.

Just 7% of Trump supporters and 4% of Harris supporters said doing so wasn't too important, or important at all.


Trump supporters favored smaller government by a wide margin (84%) over Harris supporters (22%). Harris supporters were much likelier (87%) than Trump supporters (55%) to say that "religion should be kept separate from government policies." Nearly half (45%) of Trump supporters and just 13% of Harris supporters agreed that "government policies should support religious values and beliefs."

More Trump supporters (46%)  than Harris supporters (22%) said that belief in God is a prerequisite "to be moral and have good values," per the Pew analysis.

Trump and Harris supporters also have very different family values.

Some 60% of Trump supporters and just 17% of Harris supporters said that "society is better off if people make marriage and having children a priority," while 81% of Harris supporters and 39% of Trump supporters said that "society is just as well off if people have priorities other than marriage and children."

Originally published at JNS.org




Other News

February 06, 2026Welcome To The Bounty Board: Where Algorithms Post Orders For Humans

Tasks on RentAHuman are not called jobs or gigs. They are called "bounties." The word choice matters. Bounties imply capture, completion, ...

February 06, 2026Bitcoins Death Spiral And The Shadow Of An Economic Reset

Bitcoin, once hailed as the "digital gold" of the 21st century, is plunging faster than headlines can keep up. While financial volatility ...

February 06, 2026Lessons From Canada's Gun Control Push: When 'Voluntary' Isn't Really Voluntary

Canada's long-running effort to rein in firearms ownership has entered a strange and revealing phase--one that should concern not only gun...

February 06, 2026Scouting America Shift - Conviction Or Calculation?

Once again, Scouting America is in the headlines--and unsurprisingly, it appears the organization is weighing whether its convictions are ...

February 05, 2026Rehearsing Control: The WHO Practices For The 'Next Pandemic'

On the surface, preparedness sounds wise. But prudence becomes something far darker when preparation quietly shifts power away from nation...

February 05, 2026When Machines Begin To Imitate The Image Of God: Humanoid AI Is Coming

A humanoid robot unveiled recently in Shanghai is not merely another step forward in artificial intelligence - it is a signal flare for wh...

February 05, 2026A Generation Alone? Nearly Half of Women May Be Single And Child-Free by 2030

By 2030, nearly half of women between the ages of 25 and 44 are expected to be single and child-free. Not delayed. Not undecided. But livi...

Get Breaking News