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Thứ Năm, 7 tháng 11, 2024

TRUMP TRIUMPHS AND RETURNS TO THE WHITE HOUSE WITH A CATHOLIC VICE PRESIDENT

 

EDITORIAL: Trump triumphs and returns to the White House with a Catholic vice president

The Catholic Herald

November 6, 2024 at 2:00 pm

 


The US election has turned out to be not quite as close-run as the pundits and the pollsters predicted. The results are in, and they are decisive. In January Donald Trump will return to the White House as the next president; JD Vance, a Catholic convert, will be his vice president.

This is a momentous result, not least for Catholics and indeed for all who hold dear the protection of life in the womb. Kamala Harris’s only clear policy – there really were not many – was that she was pro-abortion in all circumstances, although this was usually expressed euphemistically in terms of her support for “women’s health” and “women’s reproductive rights”.

To paraphrase Ms Harris herself in her questioning of Brett Kavanaugh for the Supreme Court, what other form of healthcare entails the destruction of another human being? What was also troubling was the plain suggestion that she would pack the Supreme Court in order to override the existing majority which did away with Roe v Wade and returned the abortion issue to individual US states. This would have been constitutionally wrong and disastrous for the protection of the unborn. Now this vexed issue will be decided in individual states, one way or another.

There are other matters where Ms Harris’s views ran counter to those of the Church, including her undiscriminating support for trans rights. Some Catholics also took offence at her failure to make an appearance at the annual Al Smith dinner in New York, which presidential candidates would normally be expected to attend, something for which Cardinal Timothy Dolan took her to task. This suggested a certain cowardice on her part, as well as the desire to establish a calculated distance from the Church – though she did send a friendly video message.

In the event, the Catholic vote, as predicted by the Pew Report, seems to have been mostly for Trump in roughly the proportion of the electorate as a whole. Catholics may indeed have voted on economic grounds, as they are perfectly entitled to do, but some will have been prompted to vote Republican by the distance between the Catholic take on moral issues and that of the Democrat nominee. Once, Catholics could have been assumed to be Democrat; it is healthy that they now feel free to vote for other parties as their consciences dictate.

In honesty it must be admitted that the US electorate was not spoilt for choice in this election. The refusal of Donald Trump to acknowledge defeat after the last election was deeply troubling to any democrat, and his home life and his views of women, at least in the past, have been far from ideal from a Christian perspective. Many Catholics will have voted for the least worst candidate rather than joyfully embraced Mr Trump as a role model.

But we must be realistic; had voters known about the private conduct of John F Kennedy, would they have wholeheartedly supported him as they did? Politics attracts individuals who often, unfortunately, lack self-discipline. On the positive side, the election sees the election of JD Vance as vice president. It is an office that is crucial in its own right and gives its holder a strong claim to a future presidential candidacy. Mr Vance is a thoughtful and intelligent individual and the author of Hillbilly Elegy, an admirable book (which has been made into a film) about the neglected US underclasses.

Mr Vance is in many respects the opposite of Mr Trump. Many people, not only Catholics, will have taken grave offence that Ms Harris’s running-mate, Tim Walz (formerly a Catholic, now a Lutheran), called Mr Vance “weird”, apparently for no better reason than for some thoughtless remarks about “childless cat ladies” long before he was a vice-presidential candidate. The Catholic Herald is pro-ladies and pro-cats, but Mr Walz’s reaction to his remarks was absurd.

The vice president-elect thought hard about his decision to become a Catholic. His conversion was due in part to his perception that neither the left nor right in politics meets the whole of human needs; the complete, holistic understanding of the human being is found in the Catholic Church. His wife comes from an Indian family and is not a Catholic; together they offer a positive example of family life, something the American public still values.

In normal circumstances, Catholics might be expected to regret the departure of Joe Biden, a Catholic president. But many will not, in great part because Mr Biden has not reflected Catholic teaching in important respects: on abortion and trans issues his views are indistinguishable from those of Kamala Harris. Nor has he at any point demonstrated a Catholic perspective on any of the great issues of the day, unless it be a certain reluctance to support some Israeli actions against Palestinian civilians.

The situation in Gaza and Lebanon, in fact, is an important issue that will face new administration in January. No Christian, not even Mr Trump, should give carte blanche to Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, to carry out indiscriminate attacks on Palestinian civilians, even in order to destroy Hamas enclaves. The just-war principle of proportionality forbids it. And while we must never forget the brutal atrocities Hamas conducted against Jewish civilians over a year ago, nor the awful plight of over 100 remaining Jewish hostages in Hamas hands, this does not amount to a validation of every Israeli response, not least because that response has hit Christian Palestinians hard. Mr Vance must speak for Christian principles and communities on this critical issue.

There is also the matter of the treatment of migrants. Mr Trump’s most decisive policy proposal has been for the repatriation of illegal immigrants, most of them from Latin and South America. He is within his rights to condemn illegal immigration, though we must hope he will exercise compassion towards individual migrants. More to the point, it is not enough simply to deport these wretched people. The US must take a far more proactive and positive approach to address the problem of why they feel the need to flee their homes. The unhappy situation in Venezuela, for instance, is the reason why people no longer wish to live there. Active engagement in the region should be the corollary of deportations.

Mr Trump will not be inaugurated until January, and there is still time to refine his policy on a host of critical issues. Meanwhile, let us hope that Mr Biden uses his remaining months as president to promote peace, especially in the Middle East. Catholics should pray for those in public office, whoever they are; so much depends on them. The Catholic Herald wishes the incoming administration well.

https://catholicherald.co.uk/trump-triumphs-and-returns-to-the-white-house-with-a-catholic-vice-president/

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