Or not.
Making points that are explored at length by my friend Mark Stricherz in Why The Democrats Are Blue, Kenneth L. Woodward writes:
The presidential race of 1960 is the only one in American history in which a candidate’s religion became a decisive campaign issue. The country had never elected a Roman Catholic to the nation’s highest office, and for a great many Protestants the prospect represented a threat to religious liberty because Catholics, in their view, were subject to a command-and-obey religious system.
Making points that are explored at length by my friend Mark Stricherz in Why The Democrats Are Blue, Kenneth L. Woodward writes:
The presidential race of 1960 is the only one in American history in which a candidate’s religion became a decisive campaign issue. The country had never elected a Roman Catholic to the nation’s highest office, and for a great many Protestants the prospect represented a threat to religious liberty because Catholics, in their view, were subject to a command-and-obey religious system.
The assumption that the United States was essentially a Protestant country ran
deep among both liberal “main line” Protestants (though influential voices from
this camp such as the theologian Reinhold Niebuhr disagreed) and the mostly
Southern fundamentalists and conservative evangelicals who, unlike Niebuhr and
other ecumenical Northerners, rarely socialised with Roman Catholics, much less
voted for one.
Thus, while American Catholics celebrated John F. Kennedy’s election as a
breakthrough for their religion, the 1960 campaign provoked a painful catharsis
for those American Protestants who still clung to the assumption that the
United States always was and should remain essentially Protestant in principle,
polity and national profile.
It is difficult for Americans of subsequent generations to realise what Kennedy
as a Catholic was up against. In their Democratic primary race against Hubert
H. Humphrey, a jovial, bias-free senator from Minnesota, Kennedy strategists
figured they had to win West Virginia, a mountainous border state settled by
mostly Scots-Irish who typically voted Democrat, as proof that a Catholic could
win in an overwhelmingly Protestant state.
Early in the West Virginia primary, polls showed Kennedy leading Humphrey by 17
percentage points. But as primary day drew closer, his lead dwindled to a
statistical tie. What happened? Protestant preachers had alerted West
Virginians that the handsome young senator from Massachusetts was a Catholic.
Lou Harris, Kennedy’s campaign pollster, found a way to neutralise the preachers’
bias. He created a campaign commercial that focused on Kennedy’s hand resting
on a Bible, as if he were taking an oath, while the candidate’s voice pledged
his allegiance to the separation of Church and State. The commercial was
broadcast over every local television station in West Virginia, and partly
because of it Kennedy won the state and the Democratic nomination.
Kennedy’s selection of Texan Lyndon B. Johnson, the majority leader of the US
Senate, as his vice-presidential running mate was based on the hope that
Johnson’s name would help the ticket win Texas, with its huge fistful of
electoral college votes, and thus balance his certain defeat in the Deep South,
a region known for being inhospitable to Catholicism.
Vice President Richard Nixon, the Republican nominee, pledged not to play the
religion card. That did not mean he or his campaign would not welcome or aid
those who did. Indeed, the Fair Campaign Practices Committee collected 360
anti-Catholic publications and tracts mailed to an estimated 20 million voters.
And that did not include countless Sunday sermons and religious radio
programmes.
One little-known story involving evangelist Billy Graham, who had achieved his
national political influence under President Dwight D. Eisenhower, illustrates
just how determined a great many influential Protestant clergy were in the
autumn of 1960 to prevent a Catholic from winning the White House.
Early in the
Kennedy-Nixon campaign, Graham wrote to his close friend, Lyndon Johnson, to
assure him that, while he personally would vote for his even closer friend,
Richard Nixon, he would not take sides in the campaign. In fact, Graham wrote,
he would sit out the race at a house in Montreux, Switzerland.
But in
September, Graham summoned about two dozen Evangelical leaders to Montreux,
where no reporters would notice. There they discussed the dangers of electing a
Catholic President and how they could mobilise American Protestants to counter
all the Catholics who would vote for one of their own.
Among Graham’s guests at Montreux were Norman Vincent Peale, author of The
Power of Positive Thinking and a leading main-line churchman from New York
City; L. Nelson Bell, editor of Christianity Today magazine and Graham’s
father-in-law; Harold Ockenga, a leading Evangelical theologian; J. Elwin
Wright, the co-founder of the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE); and
Glenn L. Archer, head of Protestants and Other Americans United for Separation
of Church and State, a putatively secular anti-Catholic organisation.
After the meeting, both Graham and Peale wrote to Nixon, explaining their plan.
Under the auspices of an NAE spin-off called – ironically – Citizens for
Religious Freedom, they would hold a conference at the Mayflower Hotel in
Washington DC to brief 150 other Protestant leaders on ways to stop the Kennedy
threat to religious freedom.
Graham stayed behind in Montreux and Peale agreed to front the closed-door
meeting, where several of the Montreux group spoke. Peale, for example, warned
that “our American culture is at stake” and Bell declared: “The antagonism of
the Roman Church to Communism is in part because of [their] similar methods.”
Two reporters slipped into the session, took notes on the rabidly anti-Catholic
discussion and shared them with other reporters outside. When Peale addressed a
press conference afterwards, he took such a drubbing from the reporters’
questions that afterwards he went into a deep depression and never regained his
earlier public standing. Graham, meanwhile, never owned up to his central role
in the plot against Kennedy. Ironically, the journalists’ exposé of the meeting
initiated one of the major turning points of the 1960 campaign.
Kennedy was campaigning in the West when he read about the clandestine meeting
in Washington. In his pocket was an invitation to address the Greater Houston
Ministerial Association, hardly a friendly crowd, which he decided right then
to accept. In that historic speech Kennedy declared in part:
“I believe in an
America where the separation of Church and State is absolute, where no Catholic
prelate would tell the President (should he be Catholic) how to act, and no
Protestant minister would tell his parishioners for whom to vote.”
That single
speech, reported in headlines throughout the country, did much to cool
anti-Catholic prejudice. It is unlikely Kennedy would have won in November without
it.
As it turned out, Protestant Americans had nothing to fear from President
Kennedy. The Pope did not issue him directives, as some Protestant leaders claimed
he would. American bishops did not drop by the White House, and on the one
issue that both conservative Protestants and Catholic bishops cared about –
federal aid to parochial schools – Kennedy had already pledged not to support
the bishops
In this way, Kennedy was not the first Catholic President but the
first President who happened to be Catholic. He was a very secular man whose
Catholic identity was essentially tribal – of a piece with his Irish heritage
and Democratic Party affiliation.
In less than a decade after Kennedy’s assassination, changes in both the
Catholic Church and the Democratic Party dramatically altered old relationships
between the two. In the Kennedy and Johnson eras, Presidents paid political
homage to the Cardinal Archbishop of New York who, especially in the person
Francis Cardinal Spellman, was the Church’s major point of contact between the
American hierarchy and the White House.
But the creation of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops after the
Second Vatican Council gradually shifted that contact to the elected president
of the conference (not always a cardinal) and, on the day-to-day level, to the
lobbyists and staff specialists at the bishops’ secretariat in Washington DC.
Thus, while individual cardinals and residential bishops could and did speak
out on public policy issues, especially abortion rights, it was the bishops’
conference that distributed guidelines on political issues for Catholics to
consult before voting.
But the changes in the Democratic Party after the 1968 riot-torn party
convention in Chicago were farther-reaching and more consequential for American
Catholics. Until then, the Democratic Party represented Roosevelt’s New Deal
coalition of northern liberals, southern conservatives, intellectuals and
Catholic and other blue-collar workers who together pushed through the social
programmes of Harry Truman’s Fair Deal, Kennedy’s New Frontier and Johnson’s
massive Great Society initiatives.
Johnson’s historic civil rights legislation cost the Democrats its conservative
white southern wing. But it was the party reforms of 1969-72 that, under the
aegis of Senator George McGovern, so changed the party structure and the way
that convention delegates are selected, that the Democrats ultimately lost the traditional
allegiance of Catholics and other working-class voters.
Under the old system, party candidates as well as convention delegates were
chosen by the big-city and statewide party bosses, a great many of whom, like
Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley, were Catholics. (Indeed, it was Daley who
suddenly “found” previously uncounted Chicago votes for Kennedy that gave the
senator the state of Illinois and cemented Kennedy’s sliver-thin win over Nixon
in 1960.)
The end of the boss system, in effect, severed the long-standing
connection between the Democratic Party and the mostly urban Catholic Church.
At the same time, the McGovern reforms established informal quotas for women,
African-Americans and young people as delegates to the national convention.
The immediate effect was the nomination of McGovern, a supporter of the
anti-Vietnam War movement, as the party’s 1972 candidate for President.
McGovern (whom I voted for) went on to lose every state but Massachusetts to
Richard Nixon. But the longer-term effect was to replace traditional Catholics
and other white working-class Democrats with feminists, secularists, college
graduates and New Left social activists who did not share the social and moral
values of the party stalwarts they replaced.
The single most important issue that broke the old bond between the Catholic
Church and the Democratic Party was abortion. After Roe vs Wade, the 1973 US
Supreme Court decision that made abortion legal and available virtually on
demand, support for abortion rights became the litmus test for any Democrat who
aspired to public office.
One by one, Catholic politicians who at first opposed abortion – including
future presidential aspirants such as Senator Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts and
Delaware Senator (and current Vice President) Joe Biden, plus powerful
governors such as Mario Cuomo of New York – abruptly changed positions.
Of these, only the combative Cuomo sought to square his Catholicism with his
support for the world’s most permissive abortion law. In a much ballyhooed
address at Notre Dame University in 1984, Cuomo argued that, while he as a
Catholic was personally opposed to abortion, he could not as a public official
try to impose his own religious beliefs on others.
It was a lawyerly but
transparently self-serving argument since no one had asked him to impose his
beliefs and, indeed, Cuomo went on to become the Democratic Party’s most
prominent Catholic voice in support of abortion rights.
By 1990, support for abortion rights became the one issue on which the
leadership of the Democratic Party would tolerate no deviation among members
seeking high state or national office. That meant pro-life Democrats could not
expect financial or other campaign support from the Democratic National
Committee – and no choice party assignments if they nevertheless won.
This unwritten party rule became brutally apparent at the 1992 Democratic
Convention in New York City, which I attended. At that convention, the party
passed a platform that included its strongest plank yet supporting abortion
rights.
As head of the Pennsylvania delegation, Robert P. Casey, the state’s
progressive, Catholic and popular two-time governor, asked to present a
minority report objecting to the plank. Not only was the governor rebuffed, he
was also humiliated when the convention welcomed to the platform a pro-choice
Republican activist who had campaigned against Casey in Pennsylvania.
The
message was clear: a Democrat who was liberal on economic issues, as Casey
clearly was, was not welcome in the party if he or she were also conservative
on social issues such as abortion.
In sum, the world’s oldest political party has changed markedly in character
and composition from the party John F. Kennedy knew. So, for that matter, has
the Republican Party, which is pro-life but at least tolerates Republican
office holders who are pro-choice. These changes have repositioned American
Catholics in relationship to politics and political parties.
First, Catholics now constitute the nation’s largest swing vote. Beginning in
1972, Republicans have won the presidency six times, the Democrats five. Each
time, a majority of white Catholic voters supported the eventual winner.
This
does not mean Catholics vote as a bloc; on the contrary, it means that Catholic
voters are too various and unpredictable to treat as a bloc. The election of
2004 was particularly notable because Democratic nominee John Kerry of
Massachusetts, the first Catholic to run for President since John F. Kennedy,
lost the Catholic vote to George W. Bush by five percentage points.
Secondly, it is apparent that Catholic politicians have nothing to fear by
taking positions at odds with the Catholic hierarchy. Indeed, as Mario Cuomo
demonstrated 30 years ago, showing independence from the bishops almost always produces
political advantage.
As for the bishops, their blend of cultural conservatism and economic
liberalism – opposing “reproductive freedom” and supporting liberal immigration
reform, for example – represents precisely the sort of blend of social conservatism
and social-justice liberalism that neither major party is willing to support.
For better and for worse, that too is the legacy of “the first Catholic
President”.
""The single most important issue that broke the old bond between the Catholic Church and the Democratic Party was abortion. After Roe vs Wade, the 1973 US Supreme Court decision that made abortion legal and available virtually on demand, support for abortion rights became the litmus test for any Democrat who aspired to public office""
ReplyDeleteTrue. But then he goes and spoils it all with this ridiculous comment.
"opposing reproductive freedom and supporting liberal immigration reform-represents precisely the blend of social conservatism and social justice liberalism"
The very last thing the United States needs is "liberal immigration reform".
They've had a torrent of immigration that has transformed many Southern cities into Spanish-speaking enclaves that are, to all intents and purposes, Latino colonies.
Pat Buchanan rightly predicts, in " Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025", that mass immigration will lead to a permanent Democratic Government one-party state, a permanent expansion of entitlement spending, spiralling debt and Big Government and the end of America's remaining civil liberties.
It's a horrifying thought-but the trends and statistics he produces in that book are frighteningly convincing.