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Even though such a question is common in the United States, it is actually an absurd thought. Men and women are elected (or should be elected) to run their jurisdiction based upon the law -- NOT set moral standards.
And for that reason, I would vote for an atheist, a Baptist, a Jew, or a Muslim. But to tell you the truth, I don't wanna know what they are, because I don't think it's important when it comes to being a successful leader.
i don't care about a candidate's religious beliefs unless they carry over into their political beliefs. public officials are elected to uphold the constitution, not the bible, and as long as they can carry out their duties responsibly, i don't care if they worship a ball of belly-button lint.

For me, I'd want to know if they were Self-Lintists, who worship lint only from their own belly buttons, or Any-Lintists, who worship belly-button lint regardless of its source. (The Other-Lintists, who worshiped lint from all sources BUT their own belly buttons, were exterminated in the purges of the 16th Century and need not concern us here.) The Self-Lintists are a little too egotistical for me. That really could affect foreign policy, especially if a foreign dignitary offers his or her own belly-button lint as a gift. S-Ls would be obliged to refuse it, causing an international incident!
For local office, this is less of an issue, of course.
as long as they're a good candidate who I can agree with, hell yes.
what I'd really love though, is a candidate who can keep their religious beliefs out of our lives, and just do what's best for the country.
Even though such a question is common in the United States, it is actually an absurd thought. Men and women are elected (or should be elected) to run their jurisdiction based upon the law -- NOT set moral standards.
And for that reason, I would vote for an atheist, a Baptist, a Jew, or a Muslim. But to tell you the truth, I don't wanna know what they are, because I don't think it's important when it comes to being a successful leader.
I agree
I'm an Atheist but I would vote for someone no matter what their religion (or lack of it) was. I think democracy is very much weakened when people vote on religious lines.
Though almost all the US founding fathers were Christian - they knew that religion and politics don't mix - which is why the US constitution has a strict separation between church and state.
I heard they were deists.
From the reading I have done that seems to be correct, especially for Thomas Jefferson, and the "Founders were Christian" schpiel is a lie systematically perpetrated by the American religious right in order to help destroy the secular principals upon which the U.S.A. was founded.
America is unique among the Western nations in the electorate's obsession with the religious beliefs of presidential (and other political) candidates. JFK must be spinning in his grave.
I don't care what my president worships, as long as he/she keeps it out of their political life. ell here in S.A. we don't even really know the religious convictions of most of our leaders.
Paranoid much? And the whole reason a lot of people care about what their president believes in is the risk of the said president having a religious or anti-religious agenda and pushing it on the people.
