By Joseph Lawler on 8.14.08 @ 12:07AM
The fraternal organization means business this time.
At the annual convention of the Knights of Columbus, held last
weekend in Quebec, Supreme Knight Carl A. Anderson declared it high
time "that Catholics shine a bright line of separation between
themselves and all those politicians who defend the abortion regime
of Roe v. Wade." Anderson cleared the way for a resolution, adopted
last Thursday, urging action on policies that would protect human
life.
If the Knights follow through on Anderson's exhortation, their
influence might matter. Catholics, as a group, usually vote for the
winner in the presidential elections. Catholics voted for Nixon in
1972, Reagan twice, George H.W. Bush in 1988, Clinton twice, and
George W. Bush in 2004.
The only recent exception was Bush in 2000, when Gore took
almost precisely 50 percent of the Catholic vote -- a significant
reason why the Gore/Bush race was one of the closest ever.
Anderson told the Catholic News Service that although his speech
included derisive remarks towards politicians who promise change
without furthering pro-life causes, he wasn't singling out Barack
Obama.
Obama, however, is clearly the pro-choice candidate in this
presidential election. He has enough problems with Catholics as it
is, without the Knights leading the charge.
The Democratic candidate's lead in the polls has been slipping.
The August 4 Associated Television News/Zogby poll even had McCain leading Obama among likely voters,
42 to 41 percent. In this poll, Obama suffered a huge
26-point swing among Catholic voters in
the last month.
In July, American Catholics favored Obama by 11 percent. In
August they favored McCain by 15 percent.
IF THE KNIGHTS have any influence in this already volatile group,
Obama will be in trouble come November.
Catholics, however, are notoriously politically divided. Latino
Catholics generally vote for Democrats. White Catholics favor more
conservative candidates. The effects of "the Catholic vote" differ
from region to region and state to state, making it a difficult
voting bloc for any candidate to pursue.
Every year, the Knights adopt resolutions on policy issues,
always including a statement against politicians supporting
pro-choice measures. The difference this year, according to vice
president of communications Patrick Korten, is that the Knights
directly called out Catholic politicians, and did so before
television audiences. It was a way of saying that they mean
business.
"The message is that Carl Anderson and the Knights of Columbus
don't believe that politicians can any longer claim other reasons
or policy matters as excuses for inaction following the loss of
over 40 million lives since Roe v. Wade," Korten explained.
He predicted that the Knights' statement in combination with the
US Council of Catholic Bishops' document "Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship" (.pdf),
released last November, will have a significant effect on Catholic
voters who might otherwise might not be focused on abortion.
There are 1.25 million members of the Knights of Columbus in the
U.S. Korten hopes other Catholics will follow Anderson's lead: "It
is time for us to say, 'if you want my vote, as a Catholic, you're
not going to get it if you vote for abortion, period....and that is
not just aimed at the Democrats, as some people might suggest. It
includes anyone who votes for abortion."
PERHAPS THE KNIGHTS will catalyze a backlash against pro-choice
candidates generally, but Obama is the one who would likely feel
the sting the most.
Abortion is one of the few subjects where the
still-inexperienced Obama has a track record, and it's not one that
would pass the Knights' -- or anyone's -- litmus tests for pro-life
candidates.
In addition to being the favored candidate of NARAL (who rated
him a perfect 100 percent on abortion issues) and other abortion
advocacy groups, Barack Obama was the only member of the Illinois
state legislature to oppose the 2002 Illinois Induced Infant
Liability Act, which protects babies born alive after failed
abortions.
In other words, one of the few things voters know for sure about
Obama is that he would permit abortion even for humans born
alive.
The Catholic vote is enigmatic: hard to collate, yet critical in
determining the presidency. And the Knights of Columbus are trying
to rally Catholics around a key issue that just happens to be the
most visible chink in the Democratic candidate's armor.
topics:
Barack Obama, Television, Business, Abortion