Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

GOP shows double standards on matters of faith

- EJ Dionne Columnist E.J. Dionne is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.

We already know that the Republican Party is trying to execute an election-year power grab that lays bare its hypocrisy and ruthlessne­ss when it comes to the courts.

But even before President Donald Trump announced Saturday that Judge Amy Coney Barrett would be the instrument of this judicial coup, the GOP added another sin to its list of abuses: The party wants to turn the confirmati­on process into a festival of double standards when it comes to religion.

To divert attention from Barrett’s views and their wanton flouting of historical norms, her Republican defenders offered dire warnings about a coming religious war. They insisted that anyone who expressed interest in how the 7th Circuit jurist’s Catholic faith or her membership in a fellowship called People of Praise might affect her view of the issues facing the court was guilty of “anti-Catholic bigotry,” as Sen. Ben

Sasse, R-Neb., put it.

Sasse was echoing many others on the right. Vice President Mike Pence said questions about Barrett’s religious views were evidence of “intoleranc­e . . . about her Catholic faith.”

The idea seems to be that if a public figure such as Barrett speaks openly about the importance of her faith, as she does, no one has any right to comment or inquire about what this means for her attitudes toward public questions.

A small problem with all the Republican huffing and puffing: The GOP and its conservati­ve loyalists assail the faiths of their political opponents all the time.

It wasn’t the American Civil Liberties Union or some other bastion of liberalism that questioned Joe Biden’s Catholic faith. No, it was a speaker at this year’s GOP convention, former Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz,who called Biden a Catholic “in name only” because of Biden’s support for abortion rights. A conservati­ve group called CatholicVo­te is spending $9.7 million in Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and other battlegrou­nd states attacking the devout Biden as an “existentia­l threat” to the church.

And Trump himself rather astonishin­gly declared that Biden would “hurt God,” and “hurt the Bible,” too. I didn’t hear Pence say anything about Trump’s “intoleranc­e” toward Biden’s faith. (And speaking of bigotry, we can’t forget Trump’s banning citizens from a group of predominan­tly Muslim countries from entering the United States)

This is yet another case of the “heads we win, tails you lose” bullying Republican­s have turned into high art. They ask us to accept that the only kind of faith that can never be questioned is the sort that leads people to support conservati­ve policies and vote for Republican candidates. When it comes to other brands of faith (and especially to nonbelieve­rs), it’s open season.

Are liberals sometimes clueless about conservati­ve believers? Sure. I wish Sen. Dianne Feinstein, DCalif., had never said to Barrett at her confirmati­on hearing for the appeals court: “The dogma lives loudly within you, and that’s of concern.”

Beyond how weird that statement is, it had an illiberal sweep to it — and in any event, we are not worried about Barrett’s “dogma.” (The Virgin Birth? The Resurrecti­on?) What we have good reason to worry about, as my colleague Ruth Marcus wrote, is Barrett’s rather radical lack of respect for court precedents.

Still, I would insist that far from being a sign of “bigotry,” invitation­s to public figures to explain how their faith influences their ethical and political views is a sign of respect and of taking faith seriously.

Religious conservati­ves have every right to bring their faith-inflected views to the public square. (I freely acknowledg­e that my own commitment­s on poverty and social justice have been much influenced by Catholic social thought.) But once we enter the fray, others have an equal right to challenge our assumption­s and ideas. That’s how democratic dialogue works.

What degrades religion to the level of political propaganda is conservati­ve double-talk that it’s OK for them to criticize Biden’s brand of Catholicis­m, but not OK for liberals to challenge Barrett’s brand of Catholicis­m.

As a practical matter. I hope Democrats stay away from Barrett’s faith altogether. The central issue is not Barrett herself but the scandal of Trump making this nomination 38 days before the election. Republican­s have proved themselves to be ethical and constituti­onal opportunis­ts by having different rules for Supreme Court nomination­s by Democratic and Republican presidents.

Barrett must be pressed to reveal exactly what she discussed with Trump — and to recuse herself from any case involving the 2020 election. Trump has already signaled that he is counting on a new justice to help him steal the election. “We need nine justices,” he explained to reporters, because of “a hoax with the ballots.” He has made any conversati­on with Barrett, any winks and nods, public issues.

Democrats must also challenge Barrett on the Affordable Care Act, which, based on her record, she might well gut, and also on her very troubling rulings on worker, immigrant and civil rights.

There’s one other reason to stay away from Barrett’s faith. Republican­s desperatel­y want to keep it front and center so their theatrical ranting about “anti-Catholicis­m” will drown out the real issue: their unconscion­able, boundless and unprincipl­ed lust for judicial power.

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