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September 14-20, 2008 Issue |
Posted 9/9/08 at 9:56 AM
Democrats
tried to attract Catholic voters in Denver. Republicans tried to attract them
in St. Paul. As the excitement at the end of the Republican National Convention
affected Catholic Republicans as much as it did other delegates, they may have
succeeded. Polls and TV ratings suggest
Sen. John McCain of Arizona and his vice-presidential candidate running mate,
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin ended the convention way ahead of where they started.
In his acceptance speech, McCain
electrified Catholics by speaking about a culture of life, funding for private
schools and America’s newest Catholics, immigrants.
“From the boy whose descendants arrived
on the Mayflower to the Latina daughter of migrant workers,” he said, “We’re
all God’s children, and we’re all Americans.”
Arizona delegate Ed Sanchez has
known and supported McCain since 1988. He said he is attracted to the
Republican ticket because of family values and faith.
“Faith plays a big role for me
because all of my values and principles are based on my faith,” said Sanchez.
“It’s where you start.
“Marriage is the core base of
America,” said Sanchez, who is a Hispanic father of three. “That provides the
whole foundation for who we are and what we do.”
He and others like him are working
to build bridges between Latinos and the Republican Party.
“Most Latinos don’t realize that the
Republican Party is closer to their values,” said Xavier Rivas, host of a
popular talk show that airs on KRLV in Las Vegas.
“Latinos as a whole vote for the
individual, not the party,” said Rosario Marin, former U.S. treasurer in the
George W. Bush administration. “Significant numbers voted for Reagan and for
Bush twice. I come from a highly Democratic city, but the majority voted for
me.”
Catholic Outreach
Catholics were out in full force
throughout the week at the convention, hosting outreach events for local
Catholics and delegates, encouraging them to do what they can to mobilize the
vote for the McCain-Palin ticket. Supporters highlighted the party’s strong
pro-life and pro-family platform and positions of McCain and Palin to evidence
the ticket’s affinity with Catholic voters.
The Catholic Working Group, coordinated
by Republican mother and homemaker Lisa Correnti, hosted various panel
discussions and forums throughout the week and rented a skybox at the Xcel
Energy Center where prominent leaders could socialize and watch the convention.
Among the many who gathered there
were Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Fla., Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., and former U.S.
ambassador to the Vatican Thomas Melady. Also present were Ralph Reed, founder
of the Christian Coalition, Manuel Miranda, a former aide to ex-Senate majority
leader Bill Frist, and Catholic activist Deal Hudson.
Catholic outreach began the day that
many of the delegates arrived. On Sunday evening, Aug. 31, St. Paul and
Minneapolis Archbishop John Nienstedt celebrated a Mass at the Cathedral of St.
Paul for delegates and others, followed by a reception.
On Wednesday, Sept. 3, a public
forum titled “Render Unto Caesar” focused on Catholic outreach and faith in the
public square. Jeff Cavins, director of the Archbishop Harry J. Flynn
Catechetical Institute in St. Paul, moderated the event, which was held at the
Hilton Garden Inn in St. Paul. Brownback, U.S. Rep. Chris Smith of New Jersey,
former Maryland Lt. Governor Michael Steele and former U.S. ambassador to the
Vatican Jim Nicholson spoke. Approximately 300 people attended the forum.
Supreme Decisions
Brownback said that the next
president’s nominations to the Supreme Court is a paramount question for
Catholic voters.
Referring to the way candidates
answered a question posed by the Rev. Rick Warren during a recent forum at
Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif., Brownback pointed out that McCain
said he liked the appointments of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices
Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas. Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois, the
Democratic presidential candidate, expressed his preference for Justices Ruth
Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer.
“Obama said he wants a Warren
court,” Brownback said. “That means he wants an activist court that looks at
the Constitution as a living document. That’s what got us Roe.
“We are only one vote away from
overturning Roe v. Wade and turning the question back
to the states where it was before Roe,” added
Brownback.
“Obama has criticized the U.S. for
its moral and empathy deficit,” said Congressman Smith. He questioned how Obama
could be calling for greater empathy while “denying unborn and newly born
children the right to protection.”
Brownback, Nicholson and former
Oklahoma governor Frank Keating are co-chairmen of the National Catholics for
McCain Committee, which is engaged in campaign-related activities to reach out
to Catholics.
Pro-Life Party Platform
Phyllis Schlafly, who founded the
Republican National Coalition for Life in 1990, said that the 2008 Republican
Party platform contains some of the strongest pro-life language ever.
“Faithful to the first guarantee of
the Declaration of Independence, we assert the inherent dignity and sanctity of
all human life and affirm that the unborn child has a fundamental individual
right to life which cannot be infringed,” says the platform. “We support a
human life amendment to the Constitution, and we endorse legislation to make
clear that the Fourteenth Amendment’s protections apply to unborn children. We
oppose using public revenues to promote or perform abortion and will not fund
organizations which advocate it. We support the appointment of judges who
respect traditional family values and the sanctity and dignity of innocent
human life.”
A recent ATI-News/Zogby poll asked
voters if they would oppose a president who didn’t know when life began.
Fifty-five percent of likely voters said they would oppose such a candidate.
Among Catholics, 67% said they would oppose a president who didn’t know when
life begins.
Pro-life issues were prominent among
delegates at the convention. Many delegates pointed to McCain’s strong showing
in the televised conversations at Saddleback in August and of Barack Obama’s
inability to answer a question about when an unborn baby deserves human rights.
“The Saddleback conversation was a
turning point in how it contrasted the candidates,” said Mike Garrett, a
delegate from Bridgeport, Conn. “Obama’s silly comment about the question of
human rights attaching to a human being ‘above his pay grade.’ Senator McCain
had no problem answering that question.”
“My faith shows me the way to go,”
said Garrett. “I believe that first, last and always, life begins at
conception. That’s how the McCain-Palin ticket believes. I also believe in the
sanctity of marriage between a man and a woman. They support that.”
Tim
Drake filed this story
from the Republican National
Convention
in St. Paul, Minn.
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