RH Reality Check, October
30, 2008
Catholic Voters No Longer Beholden to Bishops and Abortion
By
Mary Hunt
Catholics have often been urged by their clergy to be single-issue
voters when it comes to abortion. But the tide has turned, and this year a much
broader social justice agenda is guiding these voters.
Abortion used to
be the litmus test of Catholic orthodoxy. Now the measure is far broader, more
catholic (small "c"). How it happened, how it will play in the 2008
election, and what it means for the future of the Catholic community are all in
question.
A Little History
In 1928, Al Smith ran against
Herbert Hoover as the first Catholic candidate for president of a major party.
(Another Catholic, Charles OConor, ran in 1872 against President Grant but
only got a smattering of votes.) Smith counted on and got a huge Catholic vote,
including many women who voted for the first time. (Full disclosure: my grandmother
canvassed her neighborhood in Syracuse, NY, for the candidate, proud that a Catholic
was in contention.)
But even with the support of the bishop, Smith lost
miserably to President Hooverboth the booming economy and anti-Catholic
prejudice were likely to blame.
In 1960, when John Kennedy accomplished
what Smith did not, the Catholic question was reconfigured. Assurances that he
was a Democratnot a Catholicrunning for president, and that he would
follow the Constitutionnot the Popewere apparently enough to gain
him a small but sufficient margin of victory.
Many immigrants were well-established,
living in the suburbs, and seeming more and more American every day..
Fears were calmed when Papal Guards were never drafted into the US military, and
the Popes (John XIII and Paul VI during his presidency) never took up residence
on Pennsylvania Avenue. Ironically, some bishops were bothered by Kennedys
vehement claims for the separation of church and state, especially when it meant
limiting funding for parochial schools.
In 1984, the candidacy of Representative
Geraldine A. Ferraro for vice president, with Walter Mondale against incumbent
President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George H.W. Bush caused the next major
Catholic stir. Even though Ferraro was personally opposed to abortion, she ran
on a pro-choice ticket. This caused conservative bishops, notably Bernard Law
of Boston and John OConnor of New York (both of whom were elevated to the
cardinalate in 1985, not so coincidentally), to speak publicly against her.
In
response, the Catholic Committee on Pluralism and Abortion took out an ad in the
New York Times on Sunday, October 7, 1984, a month before the election, to claim
that a diversity of opinions regarding abortion exists among committed Catholics.
The text continued: A large number of Catholic theologians hold that even
direct abortion, though tragic, can sometimes be a moral choice. The ad
included a call for candid and respectful discussion on this diversity of
opinion within the Church and urged that those who publicly dissent
from hierarchical statements and explore areas of moral and legal freedom on the
abortion question would not be penalized by their religious superiors, church
employers, or bishops. Mondale and Ferraro lost the election by a Republican
tsunami in favor of the happy days of Reaganomics, but the US Catholic community
was never the same again.
The 97 signers of the ad were in fact penalized
every thinkable way. The 26 nuns who belonged to 14 canonical communities were
asked by Cardinal Jean Jerome Hamer of the Congregation for Religious and Secular
Institutes to retract their signatures publicly or be dismissed from their orders.
The nuns varied considerably in their responses, some recanting, others refusing,
still others clarifying the matter as best they could given the pressures
on them and their communities. The one diocesan and one order priest as well as
the two religious brothers who signed were confronted with similar demands, with
which they complied quickly.
The other 67 signers, including theologians
and activists (full disclosure: I signed), were also sanctionedbut differently.
Many lost jobs, tenure, and/or promotion in Catholic institutions. Virtually all
were excluded from certain dioceses for speaking or teaching engagements, a ban
that remains in some places to this day. As the chilling impact of the Vaticans
wrath trickled down, many signers were simply referred to as not Catholic
by the increasingly empowered anti-abortion movement that arose in the wake of
this incident.
The New York Times ad was a decisive chapter in American
Catholic history because it made transparent how the hierarchical Church works
in enforcing its view. The aftermath was a painful reminder that priests and members
of religious communities according to Catholic Canon Law are public
persons in the Catholic Church whose dissent from the hierarchys view is
considered scandalous, thus punishable.
The hierarchy made good on its
threats to reign in those who teach, counsel and preach in its institutions. It
further served as a warning to Catholic politicians to mind their doctrines when
they run for office. In all, it showed a certain ecclesiastical muscle that has
grown flaccid since, in large part due to the priest pedophilia and episcopal
cover-up scandals.
In the late 1980s, Joseph Cardinal Bernardin in Chicago
championed the so-called Consistent Ethic of Life or seamless garment
approach to the question of abortion. In this view, abortion, while important,
is joined by moral concerns about war, capital punishment, euthanasia, economic
justice, racism, and the like. There is dispute among adherents as to whether
abortion is the preeminent concern or one among equals in this approach. This
discrepancy is key to the current shift among anti-abortion Catholic citizens
who are choosing pro-choice Barack Obama over anti-abortion John McCain.
Catholics
and the 2008 Election
Going into the 2008 election, Catholic voters
were considered a crucial cohort since they have been in the majority of those
casting popular votes for the winner in the last nine presidential contests. Nonetheless,
no one claimed that Catholics were anything close to being monolithic in their
political opinions, nor that clergy could deliver votes on one side or the other.
But there was every reason to think that abortion would still be the touchstone
of orthodoxy, with politicians dancing around their personal convictions and political
necessities in a religiously pluralistic democracy.
Recent events have
served to dislodge abortion and install a much broader social justice agenda that
guides Catholic voters. An economy teetering on recession and a failed war in
Iraq have shifted the moral focus for most people from personal to social ethics,
from abortion to the common good.
A few bishops continue to rant that abortion
is the sole criterion for voting. For example, Bishop Robert J. Herman of the
Archdiocese of St. Louis told Catholics in his diocese that
this coming
election may very well be judgment day, since The decision I make
in the voting booth will reflect my value system. If I value the good of the economy
and my current lifestyle more than I do the right to life itself, then I am in
trouble. While some parishioners feared for their immortal souls, most,
I suspect wondered who appointed Bishop Herman judge. Likewise, Bishop Joseph
F. Martino in Scranton, Pennsylvania, railed away against pro-choice candidates
whom he alleged support homicide, an overreach of episcopal proportions.
The real story is with bishops who have taken to heart their own November
2007 document, Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship: A Call to Political
Responsibility from the Catholic Bishops of the United States. Rather than
dictate policy, they wrote, We bishops do not intend to tell Catholics for
whom or against whom to vote. Our purpose is to help Catholics form their consciences
in accordance with Gods truth. We recognize that the responsibility to make
choices in political life rests with each individual in light of a properly formed
conscience.... (No. 7) They go on to say: There may be times when
a Catholic who rejects a candidates unacceptable position may decide to
vote for that candidate for other morally grave reasons. Voting in this way would
be permissible only for truly grave moral reasons, not to advance narrow interests
or partisan preferences or to ignore a fundamental moral evil (No. 35).
This formulation allows some bishops to counsel against single-issue voting.
For example, Bishop J. Terry Steib of Memphis, Tennessee, claimed that a well-formed
conscience could include voting for candidates who may not support the Churchs
position in every case (read: Senator Obama). Similarly, Auxiliary Bishop
Gabino Zavala of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, Bishop-President of Pax Christi,
a US Catholic peace group, urged talking about life issues, beginning with
abortion but including all of them. It is clear that these bishops have
not backed off of abortion, but it is equally the case that they have not so focused
on it that they miss the many conditionsracism, poverty, sexism, war, among
othersthat form the context in which abortions are necessary, the context
that needs to change if the number of abortions is to be reduced. This larger
context constitutes gravely moral reasons why a Catholic could, some
might say should, vote for Obama over McCain despite their respective positions
on abortion.
Theologians and other Catholic scholars have led the way on
this approach. Pro-choice Catholic scholars have long argued that one can favor
legal abortion from a Catholic perspective as part of a broadly conceived agenda
for social justice. But it is hard to overestimate the sea change that is happening
when those who oppose abortion recognize and articulate the need for such an agenda
even if it is promoted by a candidate who is pro-choice. Boston College theologian
Lisa Sowle Cahills approach is to criticize those bishops that have
come dangerously close to making implicit political endorsements by telling Catholics
that abortion trumps all other moral issues and lashing out against the Democratic
Party. She is a Catholic scholar who opposes abortion but recognizes that
at a time of profound economic crisis, understanding the connection between
poverty and abortion taken on even greater urgency.
The former dean
of the Columbus School of Law at the Catholic University of America, Douglas Kmiec,
now professor at Pepperdine University, surprised his fellow anti-abortion supporters
by deeming Senator Obama quite Catholic for his views on the war in Iraq, health
care, and other bread-and-butter justice issues, despite Obamas pro-choice
position. Another law professor, Nicholas Cafardi of Duquesne University, has
also assessed the scene and concluded that there is more than one intrinsic
evil in the world, a safe bet given the myriad challenges to human life
abroad among us. He has said that Barack Obama will do a better job of operationalizing
Catholic values than his opponent.
Hardly defections from the anti-abortion
camp, these respected scholars are simply broadening their definition of pro-life
and moving toward a seamless garment view which allows for more than
one issue to be the basis of a well-formed Catholic conscience.
Professor
Cafardi, both a civil and canon lawyer, suggested that even overturning Roe v.
Wade will not end abortion as the matter would revert to the states. The logic
and persuasiveness of these arguments by anti-abortion Catholics signals change.
In fact, at the 11th hour of the campaign, several heads of committees of the
US Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a statement reinforcing another part
of their 2007 statement: Both opposing evil and doing good are essential
obligations. (No. 24). One wonders if the bishops do protest too much, if
in the rough and tumble of politics they really want a candidate who opposes abortion
but favors fiscal, military, and social policies that run counter to much of Catholic
social teaching.
Predictably, George Weigel and other Catholic conservative
writers are also deeply disturbed by this turn of events. They are realistic about
how hard it is to make a case for the Republican platform on the basis of Catholic
social teaching. Even if abortion were not on the table, Senator McCains
approaches to health care, tax policy, and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would
be a hard sell to well-formed Catholic consciences. I presume that the Weigels
of this world are boxed in on the abortion issue in ways that make it hard to
move. Or, less likely, they are still enamored of President Bushs failed
economic policies that have impoverished the middle class and threatened the existence
of those who are poor. Perhaps they prefer to support bans on abortion than lay
out their economic priorities for public Catholic scrutiny in light of teachings
in favor of the common good, the preferential option for the poor, and other traditional
Catholic ways of saying that the earths good belongs to all of the earths
people.
In any case, the tide has turned. While there is no Catholic consensus,
there is now clearly a move toward seeing a range of issues as life
issues, including war, poverty, racism, sexism, heterosexism, and environmental
destruction. That Catholics will vote their consciences is not in question. That
they have informed them on more than matters of abortion is a welcome change.
Catholics of Tomorrow
The first test of this new consensus
will be in the presidential election itself. My crystal ball is out of commission,
the polls can be wrong, and anything can happen two weeks out. But I expect that
Catholics will vote for Obama in large numbers. I am not sure this is because
of or even in spite of his position on abortion. Rather, I think it may be a sign
that the centrality of abortion for Catholics is over. Even the bishops in their
nuanced statement did not insist that any single issue ought to determine ones
vote. And even if they had, I think the genie is out of the bottle and Catholic
hierarchical leaders do not have the clout they might have had in the 1980s.
No
matter the outcome of the election, there will undoubtedly be backlash from those
who will keep their focus on abortion and perhaps even try to make contraception
harder to get and pay for. Already pro-life pharmacies are springing
up that do not stock even condoms. Given the HIV/AIDS pandemic, this alone is
morally unspeakable.
The larger picture is more promising in my view. A
broader understanding of Catholic social justice teaching will prevail. War, want,
and greed will be shown up for the contradictions they present to abundant life
for all. New energy and new coalitions will emerge among those Catholics and many
others who commit to creating a context in which peace, prosperity, and shared
resources are the norm. How one cooperates in this effort, how one contributes
to the common good, will be the hallmark of tomorrows Catholics.
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