作者falstaff (no day but today)
看板Catholic
標題[情報] 天主教徒轉向歐巴馬
時間Mon Oct 27 08:15:28 2008
這篇報導說
天主教徒 是搖擺選民 (中間選民)
在2004年 給了布希 很重要的支持
現在轉向支持歐巴馬
“我們不是one-issue的教會” LA的輔理主教說
在2004年 天主教徒
支持共和黨的布希是52%
支持民主黨的凱瑞是47%
現在的民調 天主教徒
支持民主黨的歐巴馬是 55%
支持共和黨的馬侃是35%
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http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/10/26/INOP13L1TE.DTL&type=printable
Catholics shifting to Democrats this time
E. J. Dionne Jr.
Sunday, October 26, 2008
It has become commonplace in American politics: Certain Roman Catholic
bishops declare that the faithful should cast their ballots on the basis of a
limited number of "nonnegotiable issues," notably opposition to abortion.
Conservative Catholics cheer, more liberal Catholics howl. And that is
usually the end of the story.
Not this year. Catholics, who are quintessential swing voters and gave narrow
but crucial support to President Bush in 2004, are drifting toward Barack
Obama. And this time, some church leaders are suggesting that single-issue
voting is by no means a Catholic commandment.
In a recent interview, Gabino Zavala, an auxiliary bishop in the Los Angeles
Archdiocese, said his fellow bishops have long insisted that "we're not a
one-issue church," a view reflected in their 2007 document "Forming
Consciences for Faithful Citizenship."
"But that's not always what comes out," says Zavala, who is also
bishop-president of the Catholic peace group Pax Christi USA. "What I
believe, and what the church teaches, is that one abortion is too many.
"That's why I believe abortion is so important. But in light of this, there
are many other issues we need to bring up, other issues we should consider,
other issues that touch the reality of our lives."
Those issues, Bishop Zavala said, include racism, torture, genocide,
immigration, war and the impact of the economic downturn "on the most
vulnerable among us, the elderly, poor children, single mothers."
"We know that neither of the political parties supports everything the church
teaches," he added. "We are not going to create a culture of life if we don't
talk about all the life issues, beginning with abortion but including all of
them."
Zavala was careful to say that he did not want to take issue with any of his
fellow bishops. But his view contrasts with that of others in the hierarchy.
This month, for example, Bishop Joseph Martino of the Scranton (Pa.) Diocese
issued a letter warning that "being 'right' on taxes, education, health care,
immigration and the economy fails to make up for the error of disregarding
the value of a human life." He added: "It is a tragic irony that 'pro-choice'
candidates have come to support homicide - the gravest injustice a society
can tolerate - in the name of 'social justice.' "
Bishop Zavala's desire to speak out with an alternative view is a sign of how
much has changed in four years: Progressive Catholics are now as organized as
conservative Catholics were in 2004. At Web sites such as
prolifeproobama.com, they are arguing that the abortion question does not
trump all other concerns.
The impact of the new Catholic politics could be substantial. Catholics are
often a decisive electoral group, partly because church membership ranges
from upscale to working-class whites, a large community of Latinos and a
significant number of African Americans.
Catholics typically make up about a quarter of the electorate, and they are
strategically located. White Catholics are important in such swing states as
Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, while Latinos make up a notable share of
the populations of New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada and Florida.
Polls have varied in measuring the Catholic shift toward the Democrats, but
Obama seems to be running ahead of John Kerry's performance in 2004.
According to the network exit polls, Bush carried 52 percent of the Catholic
vote to 47 percent for Kerry. By contrast, a mid-October Pew Research Center
survey showed Obama leading John McCain among Catholics by a ratio of 55 to
35 percent.
Washington Post surveys over the same period have found more modest Catholic
gains for Obama. A recent Post tracking poll showed Obama and McCain at 48
percent each.
Obama's Catholic share probably stands somewhere between the Pew and Post
numbers. But even a split among Catholics could mark a sufficient improvement
over Kerry's performance to tip key states the Democrat's way.
In many respects, Catholics simply reflect the country as a whole in moving
toward the Democrats because of frustrations with the economy and the Bush
years.
But the Catholic debate entails a very particular argument over what counts
as a commitment to life. To an unexpected degree, this election could hang on
the struggle of Catholic voters with their priorities and their consciences.
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※ 編輯: falstaff 來自: 75.18.254.63 (10/27 14:09)