The Morning Call

Catholic vote is up for grabs

- By Mary Jo McConahay

Catholics are being told not to vote Democratic because the party supports abortion. But we’re also told to oust President Donald Trump because he violates a core Catholic teaching: respect for all life

Trump, throughout his term, has restored federal capital punishment, put immigrant children in cages and reversed protection­s for the environmen­t. Oh, and he lies.

So what’s a Catholic to do?

The dilemma throws a light on deep divisions in the U.S. branch of the Catholic Church, which has experience­d a virtual schism since the elevation of Pope Francis in 2013. One side, like Francis, emphasizes social justice, a bigger role for women and an openness toward LGBTQ+, divorced and remarried Catholics.

The other side stresses personal piety, long-establishe­d devotions and an unquestion­ing obedience to clergy.

Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Amy Coney Barrett, a Catholic reportedly associated with a group outside the Catholic mainstream known as People of Praise, draws support from the conservati­ve side of the divide. They hope Barrett will chip away at abortion rights.

This divide matters for anyone aiming to predict the “Catholic vote” in November. We are the country’s largest religious denominati­on (more than 51 million adults), we vote (more than 75% in 2016), and the majority of Catholic voters have picked the winning presidenti­al candidate in nine out of the last 10 elections. Last time, most of us went for Trump.

This time, neither candidate can seem to get a firm grip on a Catholic bloc. We don’t align completely with either Joe Biden, a practicing Catholic who carries a rosary in his pocket and comfortabl­y quotes Scripture or Donald Trump, for whomopposi­tion to abortion is a campaign centerpiec­e.

The division in the pews has become too stark. “We need you more than ever,” Cardinal Timothy Dolan of NewYork told Trump in an April phone call concerning the plight of Catholic schools during the pandemic. With some 600 Catholics on the line, Trump turned the call into a campaign event, touted his stands against abortion and for “school choice,” calling himself the “best (president) in the history of the Catholic Church.”

The social justice side of the divide was outraged. Whydidn’t the bishops bring up white

nationalis­m or immigratio­n? As 1,500 Catholic leaders, priests and theologian­s wrote in an open letter to Dolan, “There is nothing ‘pro-life’ about Trump’s agenda.”

The Catholic far-right fringe, however, overlaps with the hardcore MAGAcrowd. Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, a former papal ambassador to the United States, used the language of the QAnon conspiracy theory in a June letter to the president, committing himself and other “children of light” to the “Biblical” contest with the “children of darkness offspring of the Serpent.”

Vigano compared the alleged “deep state” to the alleged existence of a heretical “deep church.” Trump gave Vigano’s followers a nudge toward the mainstream by tweeting his letter and appreciati­on.

Even COVID-19 causes disagreeme­nt. While many U.S. prelates and pastors are opting to follow public health guidelines by televising or live-streaming masses, others decry restrictio­ns on gatherings as violations of religious freedom.

Despite the severe divide in the church, it is ultimately up to individual Catholics to decide how to vote. But no matter how we mark our ballots, the November outcome won’t be a unified, predictabl­e “Catholic vote.”

As key Catholic thinkers have concluded over the centuries, “one’s own conscience must be obeyed before all else.”

Mary Jo McConahay is the author of “The Tango War: The Struggle for the Hearts, Minds, and Riches of Latin America during World War II.” This column was produced for the Progressiv­e Media Project, which is run by The Progressiv­e magazine, and distribute­d by Tribune News Service.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? Joe Biden walks from St. Joseph on the Brandywine, a Roman Catholic Church, after Mass last month in Wilmington, Delaware.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP Joe Biden walks from St. Joseph on the Brandywine, a Roman Catholic Church, after Mass last month in Wilmington, Delaware.

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