July 9, 2008 - 1:43pm

The Catholic Voter

As the presidential race heats up, both parties are looking at so called swing voters, those who have in the past gone from one party to another dependent on the candidates and on the issues.  One of the largest groups is the Catholic vote.  Once solidly Democratic and working class, Catholics have voted Republican in larger numbers from Reagan to Bush II.  The Catholic hierarchy has become committed to the Republican party, especially in national bishops conference statements; one thinks at times they are an arm of the GOP national committee.  They have elevated opposition to abortion to the highest echelon and no other issue, including social justice or the end of war, are even close in their view.  In an apparent, though veiled, attempt to support pro-life candidates who are nearly always Republican they have even attempted to influence people in the pew.

The most recent Pew Forum poll, as summarized by Patricia Zapor, presents a very different picture of the "elusive Catholic voter."  The study of 1,007 Catholic votes found 41 percent unaffiliated with either the Democrat Party or the Republican Party, with 38 percent being Democrats and 21 percent Republican.

The study found that:

  • 78 percent said the US should guarantee basic heath care for all citizens
  • 58 percent said a woman should have the right to choose an abortion.  Sixteen percent believed abortion should be legal in all cases, and another 32 percent say it should be legal in most cases, Eighteen percent said it should be illegal in all cases, 27 percent said it should be illegal in most cases.
  • 41 percent said they believe all human life, from conception  to natural death is sacred
  • The largest segment of the Catholics survey, 33 percent, said they are most influenced by personal experiences in their thinking about government or public affairs; the next largest was 23 percent who said they are most influenced by the  news media; 14 percent said their education influenced them,  and only 9 percent said religious beliefs are their biggest influence.
  • In deciding right and wrong, people cite practical experience and common sense with 57 percent holding that view, followed by 22 percent who said religious teachings and beliefs   were the guideposts.
  • 36 percent are conservative, 38 percent are moderates; 18 percent are liberal

The picture that emerges is of  a  voting group that is remarkably similar to the general population, more supportive of strict environmental laws, more committed to diplomacy than to military force, more concerned with domestic problems than overseas issues, more concerned about helping the needy.  Any candidate trying to woo the Catholic vote ought to know better than the clergy or the Catholic media what the layman and woman are thinking.

Michael P. Riccards is Executive Director of the Hall Institute of Public Policy - New Jersey.

Comments

From my reading of this


there is no Catholic vote. Catholics have become integrated in the economic and social issues of a Prod country.

07/10/08 9:58 am

Pew - As in this stinks


"23 percent who said they are most influenced by the  news media"

 

Well there you have it, the poor, stupid that claim to be Catholic -

In Name Only.

07/13/08 11:25 pm

The abortion info is bogus


The abortion info is bogus because the questions are vague - standard protocol unfortunately for many abortion surveys nowadays.

07/14/08 5:06 pm

Catholuc Whaaaaat?


That first comment hits it square; the words 'Catholic' and 'voter' the same phrase, much less sentence, are preemptive non-sequiturs. Long ago, when 'banned in Boston' meant outlawed by Papal edict, things were much different. Priests could drop strong hints at the bully pulpit translating easily to voting orders for the docile faithful. Not so today, however. Church minions in frightful numbers have all but savaged what remains of 'Mother Church's' credibility, what with a better educated population. Catholics have in effect segregated themselves into philosophical groups, the more activist of which are questioning the clay-footed authority as it has long deserved. Try preaching platitudes to these enlightened ones!

07/16/08 10:12 am

Thank you.


Finally, some real analysis and reporting instead of liberal dribble and opinion based in nothing but raw, unintellectual emotion!

74% of all Catholics are RIGHT OF CENTER with 36% identifying as conservative.

Obama's missteps with Wright prevent him from taking advantage of this opportunity while being dragged to the left by the Hillary activists and other leftists who don't realize that just three Democrats have received more than 50.4% of the vote since 1944 and Bill Clinton wasn't one of them!

The answer is FDR (44), Johnson (64) and Carter (76).

Vote Column - All the way!

07/17/08 5:57 pm

Riccards Wrong On Church


The Catholic Church, including its Bishops Conference, has not taught new doctrine since the time of Ronald Reagan. The Church has been most consistent, since the time of Christ, in opposing abortion and other attacks on life. Many Republicans finally came around to the Catholic position on life and that explains the Catholic voter swing.


Two more points: 1) the survey is slanted and betrays how little the survey's creator and Riccards know about things Catholic. 2) The swing from Democrat to Republican among Catholic voters is a stronger indication of how cooky Liberal Democrats have begun in the last three decades.

Laus Deo,
Jesse O. Kurtz
Managing Editor for The Atlantic City Scoop
http://cityofatlantic.wordpress.com
Jesseokurtz@gmail.com

07/18/08 9:16 am