Chicago Sun-Times

House chaplain gets job back

Conroy retained after scathing letter

- BY ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON — The embattled chaplain of the U. S. House of Representa­tives has won his job back just hours after sending a scalding letter to House Speaker Paul Ryan that accused a top Ryan staff aide of telling him “something like ‘ maybe it’s time that we had a Chaplain that wasn’t a Catholic.’” Ryan, a Wisconsin Republican, forced the Rev. Pat Conroy to tender his resignatio­n last month, sparking a firestorm. Ryan has said he was dissatisfi­ed with Conroy’s pastoral care to lawmakers. But in a statement Thursday, Ryan — himself a Catholic — reversed course.

“It is my job as speaker to do what is best for this body, and I know that this body is not well served by a protracted fight over such an important position,” Ryan said.

Ryan’s statement came soon after Conroy delivered a two- page letter that said he has never “heard a complaint about my ministry” as House chaplain. Instead, Conroy says top Ryan aide Jonathan Burks told him the speaker wanted his resignatio­n, and cited a prayer last year that was potentiall­y critical of the GOP tax bill.

“I inquired as to whether or not it was ‘ for cause,’ and Mr. Burks mentioned something dismissive­ly like ‘ maybe it’s time that we had a Chaplain that wasn’t a Catholic,’” Conroy wrote to Ryan in a letter that was also sent to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D- Calif.

Ryan did not directly address Conroy’s explosive charge, saying, “To be clear, that decision was based on my duty to ensure that the House has the kind of pastoral services that it deserves.”

Burks, in a statement released by Ryan’s office, said “I strongly disagree with Father Conroy’s recollecti­on of our conversati­on.”

Conroy also wrote that Burks mentioned a November prayer regarding the GOP tax bill that upset many Republican­s.

Then, Conroy prayed for law- makers to make sure that “there are not winners and losers under new tax laws, but benefits balanced and shared by all Americans.”

Conroy told The New York Times last week that shortly afterward, Ryan warned Conroy to “stay out of politics.” Conroy also invited a Muslim cleric last year to give the opening prayer, a move that Democrats say may have upset GOP conservati­ves.

Conroy’s resignatio­n sparked an uproar last week when it became known that he was asked to quit. Catholic lawmakers such as Reps. Gerald Connolly, D- Va., and Peter King, R- N. Y., were particular­ly upset, especially after a Republican lawmaker, Mark Walker, R- N. C., was quoted in The Hill as saying Conroy’s replacemen­t should have a family — which would rule out Catholic priests — to better serve the needs of lawmakers.

Ryan’s retreat came quickly. Congress is on vacation this week but Ryan said he would meet with Conroy early next week “so that we can move forward for the good of the whole House.”

The chaplain is elected by the full House and Democrats said Ryan does not have the power to fire him.

In an appearance in Milwaukee last week, Ryan said: “This was not about politics or prayers, it was about pastoral services. And a number of our members felt like the pastoral services were not being adequately served, or offered.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/ AP FILE ?? The Rev. Patrick Conroy, a Jesuit priest, has been U. S. House chaplain since 2011.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/ AP FILE The Rev. Patrick Conroy, a Jesuit priest, has been U. S. House chaplain since 2011.
 ??  ?? Paul Ryan
Paul Ryan

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