CATHOLIC DEMS STUCK WITH ABORTION ALBATROSS
September 29, 2006
A new Catholic activist organization, Catholics in
Alliance for the Common Good, has issued a voter guide that will be
distributed to Catholics between now and election day. Commenting on
the 12-page booklet is Catholic League president Bill Donohue:
“The voter guide is a slick attempt to get the abortion
albatross off the necks of Catholic Democrats, but it’s a failed
effort—the noose is still there. Instead of listening to James
Carville and Paul Begala, who have counseled Democrats to drop their
opposition to parental notification laws and their support for keeping
partial-birth abortion legal, the best Catholics in Alliance can do is
say it is opposed to abortion. But it makes it painfully clear that it
will never join any effort to ban any abortions, including
partial-birth. Alexia Kelley heads the new group, and in 2004 she
worked as a religion advisor to John Kerry in the closing weeks of his
campaign. Kerry is an advocate of keeping partial-birth abortion
legal.
“On p. 9 of the booklet, it criticizes many pro-life
candidates (it puts the term pro-life in quotes, as in so-called
pro-life candidates) who are nothing but talk. ‘On the other hand,’ it
says, there are pro-abortion politicians who ‘support effective
measures to promote healthy families and reduce abortions by providing
help to pregnant women and young children.’ There’s the moral
equivalency: it’s okay for a Catholic politician to give a green light
to a practice that kills a baby who is 80-percent born, just so long
as he’s against trans fats.
“On August 2, 2006, Catholics in Alliance issued a news
release urging the Senate to raise the minimum wage, an issue which
the Catholic Church has no official position on, one way or the other.
But the group has no statement urging anyone to vote against
partial-birth abortion, an issue which the Catholic Church officially
opposes. The best it can do is say it opposes the ‘root causes’ of
abortion.
“Despite what Catholics in Alliance says, there is a
moral hierarchy of issues, and as important as ending poverty is, it
does not rival the right of a child to be born.”
Share this Article
Printer Friendly
More News Releases »
|