August
16 , 2005
A pro-life Catholic says Democrats
a better fit
BY DAN SCHINZEL
The writer,
of Omaha, is a founding member of Catholic
Democrats of Nebraska, which stresses links between
Democratic Party ideals and Catholic social teachings.
A generation
ago, the term "Catholic Democrat" seemed almost redundant.
If you were Catholic, few asked about your politics. It was understood.
Today, we find a completely different political landscape in which
Catholics have become a powerful, dependable voting bloc for the
Republican Party.
This swift
conversion is partially the result of a wellplanned, well-executed
strategy by political conservatives that uses the issue of abortion
to create a wedge between practicing Catholics and the Democratic
Party. By portraying the Republican Party as the "pro-life
party," conservatives have successfully recruited Catholics
who strongly believe in protecting the unborn.
The primacy
of the abortion issue, however, is unique to these Catholic voters.
The political reality is that ending or even limiting abortion is
not a priority for the Republican Party.
Republican
strategists seem to believe that the polarizing effect of the abortion
issue is a very potent political tool and can continue to be the
wedge that drives Catholics away from the Democratic Party. It could
be argued that the last thing the Republican political machine wants
is an end to abortion, for along with it would go the Catholic vote.
That might sound harsh, but the facts about abortion indicate that
Catholics who vote Republican based on the single issue of abortion
get nothing in return.
The number
of U.S. abortions declined steadily under the Clinton administration,
reaching a 24-year low as George W. Bush took office in 2001. What
has happened since is the source of much debate, with pro-life and
pro-choice groups arguing over statistics provided by Glen Howard
Stassen, the Alan Guttmacher Institute and the Centers for Disease
Control.
But what is
absolutely clear is that, unlike the Clinton administration, the
Bush administration has simply taken the position that abortion
is wrong without paying any attention to its root causes - poverty,
unemployment, skyrocketing health-care costs and teen pregnancy,
among others.
The Democratic
Party has hurt itself by refusing to budge on the abortion issue.
Liberal Democrats have managed to merge the pro-choice and women's-rights
issues, making any dissent on abortion appear to be an attack on
gender equality. Such narrow-minded thinking has only helped Republicans
siphon off pro-life Democrats.
If the current
Catholic voting trend is to be reversed, the Democratic Party must
revert to the "big tent" philosophy of the past that promoted
inclusiveness and allowed for dissension among the ranks on issues
such as abortion.
Where does a Catholic find the Church's teaching on the sanctity
of life and its application to our social and political world?
"Faithful
Citizenship," issued in 2003 by the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops, applies Catholic social teaching to major political, social
and economic issues and provides Catholics the "consistent
moral framework" necessary to responsibly participate in our
democracy. A consistent pro-life message resonates throughout the
document. The bishops make clear the Catholic Church's opposition
to abortion, euthanasia and the death penalty. But they do not stop
there.
"Faithful
Citizenship" extends its pro-life position to a wide array
of issues concerning human dignity: supporting the right of workers
to a just wage, decent working conditions and the right to organize
without reprisal; ensuring adequate and affordable health care for
our most vulnerable populations; eradicating hunger and poverty
at home and abroad through government aid; fixing the problems of
the judicial system to reduce crime and violence; eliminating discrimination
through affirmative action; and promoting peace in the Middle East
and Africa through proactive diplomacy.
These positions
are not radical ideas set forth by some "liberal" think
tank. Rather, they are the fundamental teachings of the Catholic
Church. The message of the bishops in "Faithful Citizenship"
is entirely consonant with that of pro-life Democrats. Pro-life
Democrats must seek out those Catholics who have abandoned the party
and challenge them to examine what the church says about the key
social, political and economic issues of these times.
What
they will find is that the consistent ethic of life that should
be the guiding principle in how a Catholic votes can be found only
in the growing pro-life movement within the Democratic Party. It
is then up to all Democrats to welcome Catholics home.
http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_pg=609&u_sid=1484454
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