Well, first of all, vote. Duke theologian Stanley Hauerwas has a video going around encouraging Christians not to take the election too seriously. After all, he says that elections are where “51.1% get to tell 49.9% how to live.” There’s a mentality that if I can’t find a candidate who agrees with me on 100% of the factors of public policy, I should take my ball (or vote) and go home. If everyone followed that rule, then the moment I get a politician to meet my own standards, I disenfranchise everyone who doesn’t agree with me. That’s simply uncharitable and selfish. If you can’t bring yourself to vote for one of the major candidates, then find a third party candidate, or even write in someone who matches. If that doesn’t work, run for office yourself next time. But don’t take the easy way out and refuse to participate.
That said, I hope to convince you in this blog post that a third party vote is unnecessary, and that the faithful Catholic choice is Obama. In the following, I assume standard Catholic moral teachings. I only consider their application to public policy in the context of abortion, same-sex marriage, the poor, foreign relations, and the Supreme Court. As all of these issues are, of course, debates, I invite respectful and thoughtful comments and discussion in the comments.
Abortion
There are two glaring issues I want to address upfront: abortion and same-sex marriage. Romney, like the Catholic Bishops, is pro-life, and he appeals to the quiet of conscience” in “people of both political parties” to bolster support for his position. As the candidate who claims to stand for religious freedom, we have to trust this “conscience” is not really an appeal to any individual religion. After all, the Church teaches that legislation based on values—coercing morality—may only occur from natural law; anything else violates religious freedom. Natural law is that which "present in the heart of each man and established by reason" (CCC 1956). This means anything we as Catholics know from the Bible or from divinely-inspired Papal declarations are simply not valid. Thus we can legislate against murder, but not against missing Mass on Holy Days of Obligation.
At first glance, the matter is simple. If life begins at conception, then there is no wiggle-room. Just as we as Catholics believe that killing criminals under the death penalty is immoral, to kill the most innocent among us is that much more abhorrent. Unfortunately, that part about “life beginning at conception” is pretty difficult to establish. When does life begin? Can we, through pure reason, define life as beginning when sperm cell meets egg cell? Science can tell us details about various processes that fetus undergoes at various phases of pregnancy, but the scientist does not define words and cannot tell us when we can start applying the term “life.” Religion itself is confused on the topic. Even within Christianity, there are diverging opinions. Even Scripture seems not at peace with itself. At one point, it states “You knit me in my mother’s womb” (Psalm 139:13), and while that would make it seem that at least some time in the womb might be considered sacred, if we apply that same standard to Jeremiah 1:5, which states “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,” then perhaps that we’re alive even before conception. In Genesis 38 God even imposes the death penalty on Onan for “[wasting] his seed on the ground.” So does this mean every sperm and egg cell is living, and Congress should pass laws that consider, in the words of Elle Woods, “any masturbatory emissions, where the sperm is clearly not seeking an egg . . . reckless abandonment"?  
Ultimately, finding a definition of life confuses science and religion alike, yet in Massachusetts, Romney supported a Constitutional amendment defining life as beginning at conception. Surely there are better ways to amend a Constitution than by making it some sort of dictionary. We have the Oxford English Dictionary for that (which, incidentally, does not mention the word “conception” in its definitions of life). Even if God has instructed the Bishops and the Pope as to how the dictionary should be written, the definition is, in this case, clearly not “present in the heart of every man,” and as such, not a valid item to legislate.
Same-sex marriage
If you continued listening to the video I linked above about Romney’s support for a pro-life amendment, Romney also mentioned he fought for an amendment that would have defined marriage as between one man and one women. The Church explicitly states that homosexual relations are against natural law (CCC 2357), and in an address to the U.S. Bishops in March, Pope Benedict XVI said “Defending the institution of marriage as a social reality is ultimately a question of justice.”
However, I would like to point to Professor Paul Griffiths’ claim in his response to Professor Douglas Farrow’s thirteen theses on marriage in First Things, in which he claims that in our “pagan late-capitalist democracy ordered to idolatry of the market,” an obligation to provide political support to the traditional notion of marriage “is certainly not apparent to all ordinarily rational people.” As such, it is not natural law, and cannot fall under a proper legislative priority. (For the opposite side, see a considered defense of limiting government recognition to traditional marriage here)
As a final note on legislating morality through natural law, I would like to point out the danger in over-applying natural law. In Paul VI’s encyclical Humanae Vitae, he includes under natural law the proposition that "each and every marital act must of necessity retain its intrinsic relationship to the procreation of human life” (Humanae Vitae 11).Yet, according to a 2011 study, only 2% of sexually active Catholic women use Natural Family Planning. I trust those who fight for legislating the other sexual teachings of the Church will put just as much energy and verve into legislation supporting the illegalization of all forms of birth control, no matter their personal view on the issue. It would be unfaithful to do otherwise, seeing as they stem from the same line of natural law reasoning.
The poor
The Catholic Church teaches a preferential option for the poor, and in his recent Encyclical Benedict XVI explicitly recognized the importance of care for the poor in an institutional/political context (Caritas in Veritate 7). I have alluded in previous posts how important this element of caring for “the last, the littlest, the least” must be for the Catholic. In a brief letter to Paul Ryan, Georgetown theologians reminded us of the U.S. Bishops’ letters protesting the 2011 House budget as one that, “decimates food programs for struggling families, radically weakens protections for the elderly and sick, and gives more tax breaks to the wealthiest few.” Obama, on the other hand, expanded basic health care to an unprecedented number, in line with the Pope’s explicit callfor universal health care and the U.S. Bishops’ similar call dating back to 1919 Like Thomas Friedman in his recent New York Times Op-Ed, I reject a political ideology that recognizes a right to life up that is inviolable right up to the point one is born.
The question we have to ask, as in the two cases above, is if there is a moral obligation for the Catholic to help the poor, can we use the government to further it. There is a fundamental distinction between the individual moral issues mentioned above, and care for the poor. My friend marrying her same-sex partner of years in no way affects my parents’ marriage. However, my choice to write this while munching on a cookie at Panera rather than donating that $2 to the homeless person I walked by on the way here does in fact measurably hurt the poor. The government has a responsibility to work for the good of its members. As we accept human rights, we see that humans have a minimum level that society cannot infringe on without violating their fundamental dignity. If other institutions in society cannot, on its own, provide that level of dignity, then the government must step in to do so.
A society in which private interests provide all care for the poor is simply not possible. According to this America article, The Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate found that if every Catholic increased their charitable giving five-fold, the Church could only pay for half of this single government program, even if it focused all its resources (reserving only its own administrative costs) to it. If Church, as the largest private charity in the world, could not maintain the burden of a single government program that ensures the right to life, with five times its current resources, I find it doubtful other private institutions would be able to, as well. It is the job of the government to overcome the collective action failure of the bystander effect or diffusion of responsibility discussed in Malcom Gladwell’s The Tipping Point or here. It would be difficult to argue that the government may provide for physical defense, stage two in Maslow’shierarchy of needs, yet somehow people are on their own for stage one: basic physiological needs.
Additionally, there is a fundamental fairness concern. Romney, in supporting stripping government loans and grants from higher education, has suggested to students that they should borrow money from parents. Unfortunately, not all parents have enough money to pay for ever increasing tuition. Romney paying for the Medical School of his deceased Bain partner’s daughter is an inspiring story of his personal charity. Sadly, most of those who need the most help paying for college do not have fathers who are partners of Bain Capital and friends with millionaires who can forgive a $400,000 debt as a Christmas present. Pretending we can care for the poor in this way merely increases the stratification of wealth as the people who know the wealthy get more privileges, and those who don’t are denied them. If we believe in equality of opportunity, this is not the way to go about it.
International Affairs
Just a brief note on international affairs. As a member of an international Church that recognizes that people are people, no matter where they’re born, international affairs is always an important aspect for a Catholic’s vote. I’ll admit, Obama isn’t perfect on international affairs, but at least trials are finally happening at Guantanamo Bay (click here for a Jesuit reporter's impression), he banned waterboarding as torture, and recognizes the immigration issue as something that must be resolved. I won’t go much more into depth, because beyond those issues mentioned, I think the third debate showed us on most other substantive international issues, Obama and Romney are pretty close.
Supreme Court
As Harvard Law Professor Noah Feldman points out, several members of the Court are getting old. There is quite a good chance Justice Kennedy or Justice Ginsberg will leave the Court—voluntarily or involuntarily—in the next four years. We have one of the most conservative Supreme Courts in modern history. With the current Republican fascination with Constitutional Originalism, a President Romney appointee would be the diametric opposite of Ginsberg, and probably considerably more Originalist than Kennedy, just as President Bush replaced Justice O’Connor with the considerably more conservative Justice Alito.
Why is this a problem? Consider Burnham v. Superior Court of California (495 U.S. 604 (1990)). In Burnham, the Court unanimously held that someone could sue you in any jurisdiction they personally deliver the court summons–even if you’ve never been there before. While the judgment was unanimous, there was no opinion a majority of the Justices could agree as to was the reasoning. Writing for a Conservative plurality, Justice Scalia rested his justification in a pure pedigree argument. He explicitly rejects Justice Brennan and the liberal wing’s argument that the Court should consider “contemporary notions of due process,” and claims this “tag jurisdiction” was justified “because it is one of the continuing traditions of our legal system”(622-23). As anyone who has ever changed his or her mind about anything at all—merely because we’ve thought something in the past is not sufficient to say that it’s right. Yet Originalism takes this exact view. In his confirmation hearing, Scalia mentioned how the Originalist view would hold that “if lashing was fine [in 1789], lashing would be fine now.”
Fundamentally, this sense of Originalism is contrary to the Catholic experience of justice. The history of Church is the development towards a greater understanding of morality. Take slavery, which the fifth century St. Augustine understood as permissible, and of which the thirteenth century St. Thomas Aquinas explicitly wrote, “a slave belongs to his master.” Yet, Pope Gregory XVI penned an Encyclical in 1839 explicitly condemning the slave trade, and slavery is currently held as “against the dignity of persons and their fundamental rights“ (CCC 2414). The story of the Church is the story of how morality is greater understood over time. No Catholic can support a candidate who would nominate a Justice who believes American jurisprudence is somehow exempt from a process to which even the Holy Spirit-guided Church is subject.
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