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Edward Kennedys Catholic Legacy
America’s Culture Wars
BY Father Raymond J. de Souza Register Correspondent
September 6-12, 2009 Issue |
Posted 8/28/09 at 7:04 PM
In death Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
hardly needs his biography recalled. His life could hardly have been more
chronicled. What is more interesting to ask, especially in light of the
Catholic faith to which he was so devoted — a family priest was at his bedside
when he died — is what life he might have led and how American politics might
have been different.
For Kennedy, the judgment that
counts for eternity is at hand. Here below, his many public achievements have
been lavishly praised. His was the most public of lives — famous for who he was
before he was known for what he did — so that his private life was part of the
public record. He experienced more than most the truth of those foreboding
words of Scripture, that all that is done in secret will be brought to light,
and that which is whispered will be shouted from the rooftops. There were few
Catholics in America whose successes and sins were more published, discussed
and judged. Now, his fellow Catholics surely pray for his merciful judgment.
The public legacy of the Senate’s
greatest liberal and the last lion of his pride is a matter for public
judgment. During his 47 years in the Senate, he was the most prominent Catholic
Democrat in America. Many critics considered him a better Democrat than
Catholic. Yet the tragedy of Ted Kennedy is that had he been more faithful to
the public implications of his Catholicism, he may have been a more successful
leader of the Democratic Party. The culture wars have not been electorally kind
to the Democratic Party, and there is perhaps no person more responsible for the
culture wars than Ted Kennedy himself.
“In some ways Kennedy’s career was
the story of a man who might have been,” wrote Catholic commentator Russell
Shaw. “Might have been president of the United States if his shortcomings
hadn’t prevented that; might have been a powerful leader of the pro-life
movement if he hadn’t turned pro-choice; might have been a model of the
Catholic statesman in public life if he hadn’t become a symbol of American
Catholicism at odds with the Church.”
What Might Have Been
A broader question is what might
have become of American politics if Kennedy has chosen a different path.
By the early ’70s, Richard Nixon had
won two presidential elections — the second one the greatest landslide in
history — by fashioning a coalition that included cultural conservatives in
large numbers. The lifestyle libertinism of the 1960s’ movements which
coalesced behind George McGovern’s candidacy in 1972 proved culturally
influential but a political liability. After McGovern’s loss and, a few months
later, the Roe v. Wade abortion decision, it was
still an open question about which direction
the Democratic Party would go. Throughout the 1970s, many of the key Democratic
leaders were pro-life, as was Kennedy himself up until the Roe
decision. Had Kennedy resisted the culturally liberal trends in the Democratic
Party, what might have been?
Kennedy’s
family legacy, his impregnable position in Massachusetts (he won more than 60%
of the vote the year after Chappaquiddick) and his national prominence rendered
him immune from the pressures other politicians had to face. He could always
choose his own path. Had he chosen to remain economically liberal but
culturally conservative, he would have prevented the Democratic Party from
embracing the orthodoxy of the unlimited abortion license. Had he remained
pro-life the Democratic Party would have had to make place for other pro-life
politicians. Had he remained pro-life many others — Bill Clinton, Al Gore,
Jesse Jackson — would not have abandoned their pro-life positions as the price
to be paid for national ambition.
In
the 1970s, it was not clear that the Republican Party would become largely
pro-life. Party leaders, including Nixon, Gerald Ford, Nelson Rockefeller,
George Bush and even Ronald Reagan, favored liberalizing abortion laws. The GOP
moved toward a pro-life position in response to the Democratic Party moving in
the opposite direction. It was politically advantageous, and it was Kennedy who
permitted that advantage to be conceded. By the 1980s what are now called
“values voters” were a critical part of Reagan’s coalition. Many of the Reagan
Democrats were those who were with Kennedy on economics but could not follow
him on abortion and related cultural issues.
The
Supreme Court decision on abortion made judicial appointments more politically
salient, but confirmations remained largely pro forma
affairs — Reagan’s first two appointments were confirmed without a single
dissenting vote. But in 1987 Kennedy led the opposition to the nomination of
Robert Bork, turning the confirmation process into a brutal, partisan battle.
The verb “borking” entered the political lexicon to describe this ugly new
version of cultural politics. Democrats would later bitterly complain about
Republican tactics on “values,” but it was Kennedy’s prestige that made such
politics acceptable.
The ‘Ted Kennedy Problem’
It
was two of Kennedy’s fellow Massachusetts politicians who would reap most
directly what Kennedy had sown. Both Michael Dukakis in 1988 and John Kerry in
2004 were defeated in campaigns in which values — not economics, not
competence, not even war — were the dominant issues. Religious observance had
become the most important predictor of voting behavior. Culture had become a
partisan issue. Kennedy’s embrace of moral libertinism facilitated all that.
Had he chosen differently he could have stopped the culture wars before they
started. Few other politicians ever have the influence to make such a
consequential decision.
Indeed,
had Kennedy remained pro-life — along with his positions on immigration, health
care, poverty, war and peace — he would have entered his senior years as the
great Catholic legislator in terms of the welfare state, health care, big
government, the peace agenda and the right to life. Remember the famous pastoral
letters of the U.S. bishops on defense policy and the economy in the 1980s?
They were both well to the left politically, easily in Ted Kennedy territory.
If only he had remained pro-life, he would have been the poster boy of the
American bishops for a generation.
He
didn’t, and so the final five years of his life were marked by an intense and
painful debate about how the American bishops should deal with what could
suitably be called their “Ted Kennedy problem” — what to do about Catholic
politicians who promote abortion rights? Where Kennedy went 30 years ago, many
followed. The old lion will be laid to rest as one of the most consequential
public figures of his time. Those consequences have been difficult for the
Church. That is well known. They have been also difficult for his party, even
if the Democrats send him off with a full-throated roar. Catholics will
likely maintain a more discreet silence.
Father
Raymond J. de Souza was the Register’s Rome correspondent
from
1999 to 2003.
Long Political Career
— 47 years in the Senate
— Advocated for civil rights, workers’
rights, immigration reform and better health care.
— Fostered peace in Northern Ireland.
— Supported Roe
v. Wade (although he was previously pro-life).
— Opposed the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban
Act.
— Sponsored legislation to limit protests
outside of abortion clinics.
— Supported using federal funds for
embryonic research.
— Opposed Defense of Marriage Act and the
Federal Marriage Amendment.
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