By The Prowler on 5.17.04 @ 12:08AM
Reaching out to Michael Berg. Dropping in on Cardinal Mahony.
IRAQ OPPORTUNIST
Last week the campaign of presumptive Democratic presidential
nominee Sen. John Kerry made much of the fact that
their boy spoke with the father of Nicholas Berg,
the American murdered by Muslim extremists with ties to al
Qaeda.
Kerry, who was campaigning in Arkansas with Wesley
Clark spoke by phone to Michael Berg for
about ten minutes. Kerry's camp claimed that Berg had "reached out"
to Kerry and that Kerry had returned the phone call. But according
to a Kerry campaign staffer, it was the campaign that initiated the
call to Berg.
"People in our Pennsylvania operation had contacts with the
family," says the Kerry staffer. "The parents have been active in
the anti-war movement. The family was known to some of the groups
that do work for the campaign in Philadelphia and the suburbs up
there."
The Bush campaign on several occasions has made a point of
highlighting Kerry's attempts to take political advantage of
tragedies that occur in Iraq. "This is another one," says a Bush
campaign staffer. "It's just another example of Kerry wanting it
both ways."
After the conversation with Berg, there was talk of Kerry
traveling to Pennsylvania, a pivotal state in the 2004 election
cycle, and attending the Berg funeral. But according to the
campaign source, there was a general consensus such a move would be
too politically obvious.
In fact, Kerry had been off the phone with Berg less than four
minutes before press aides in Arkansas were calling media contacts
to leak that the conversation had taken place.
Likewise, Kerry made much of the fact that his staff had to call
the White House to arrange for a new time to see the yet unreleased
photos of alleged abuse of Iraqi inmates. In fact, Kerry's Senate
staff had failed to make arrangements for the senator to see the
films, as other senatorial staffs had done.
"There was nothing different. All Kerry's staff had to do was
make an appointment with the appropriate folks handling things in
the Senate," says a staffer for a conservative Democratic staffer.
"Instead, they make it look like the White House was trying to
block him or something."
NOW MAHONY
The senior leadership of Roman Catholic Church continues to give
aid and comfort to the Kerry campaign. The latest to step up is Los
Angeles archbishop, Roger Cardinal Mahony, who met
last week with John Kerry and his wife in Los
Angeles, and announced that Kerry was welcome to receive communion
from him or any priest in his diocese at any time.
Under Catholic Church teaching, Kerry, who has consistently
voted for and supported infanticide laws in his time in the Senate,
should refrain from receiving the sacrament of Holy Eucharist. Some
bishops across the country have announced that Kerry is not
considered a Catholic in good standing with the Church. But two of
the most senior church leaders in the United States,
Theodore Cardinal McCarrick of Washington, D.C.
and now Mahony, have met with Kerry, and, according to a source in
the U.S. Catholic Conference of Bishops, encouraged the
Massachusetts Democrat's campaign.
"There is a large segment of the conference that supports Kerry
and his progressive social and economic ideas," says the staffer.
"This is, for them, a golden opportunity to support a Catholic in
bad standing who can further their progressive goals on the
impoverished, alternative lifestyles, HIV and AIDS, and
globalization. They will take the good with the bad."
In fact, McCarrick, who is heading a committee studying how
bishops should relate to Catholics who happen to be politicians,
according the conference source, is said to have told Kerry to
ignore the slings and arrows of religiously conservative
bishops.
"The word is, Kerry was told that they are a vocal minority,
with no standing in the hierarchy of the conference," says the
staffer.
topics:
Law, Iraq, NATO