Faith in numbers: Fox News is must-watch for white evangelicals, a turnoff for atheists...and Hindus, Muslims really like CNN
- Written by Ryan Burge, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Eastern Illinois University
Fox News possesses an “outsized influence[1]” on the American public, especially among religious viewers.
That was the conclusion of the nonprofit Public Religion Research Institute[2] in a report[3] released just after the 2020 presidential election. It noted that 15% of Americans cited Fox News as the most trusted source – around the same as NBC, ABC and CBS combined, and four percentage points above rival network CNN. The survey of more than 2,500 American adults also suggested that Fox News viewers trend religious, especially among Republicans watching the show. Just 5% of Republican viewers of the channel identified as being “religiously unaffiliated” – compared to 15% of Republicans who do not watch Fox News and 25% of the wider American public.
To further explore the relationship between different faiths and the TV news they associate with as part of my research on religion data, I analyzed[4] the result of another survey, the Cooperative Election Survey[5].
The annual survey, which was fielded just before the November 2020 election, with the results released in March, polled a total of 61,000 Americans over a number of topics. One question was on their news consumption habits. It asked what television news networks respondents had watched in the prior 24 hours.
Percentage of respondents who saw TV news in past 24 hours
References
- ^ outsized influence (www.prri.org)
- ^ Public Religion Research Institute (www.prri.org)
- ^ a report (www.prri.org)
- ^ I analyzed (scholar.google.com)
- ^ Cooperative Election Survey (dataverse.harvard.edu)
- ^ Ryan Burge/CES (twitter.com)
- ^ 80% of white evangelicals voted for Republican candidate Donald Trump (www.washingtonpost.com)
- ^ those are three groups (twitter.com)
- ^ consistently vote (religionnews.com)
- ^ the Republican Party (www.pewforum.org)
- ^ plunged (www.independent.co.uk)
- ^ Sign up for This Week in Religion. (theconversation.com)
Authors: Ryan Burge, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Eastern Illinois University