Joe Biden: When ‘The Last Hurrah’ Met Catholic Lite
COMMENTARY: I would like to feel pity for the now-former
president, but that’s a steep climb.
President Joe Biden,
center, Vice President Kamala Harris, right, former President Bill Clinton and
former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, left, at the 60th inaugural
ceremonies on January 20, 2025, in Washington, DC. (photo: Tom Brenner/The
Washington Post / Getty )
George
Weigel CommentariesJanuary
22, 2025
Four years ago, this column praised
the courage of Archbishop José Gómez of Los Angeles, then-president of the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), for his Inauguration Day letter to
President Joe Biden.
In an entirely respectful tone, the archbishop pledged the
bishops’ support for the president’s goal of healing our divided country while
raising concerns about the abortion license as “a matter of social justice.”
Americans, Archbishop Gómez wrote, “cannot ignore the
reality that abortion rates are higher among the poor and minorities, and that
the procedure is regularly used to eliminate children who would be born with
disabilities.”
That letter reflected a deep consensus among the American
bishops. Yet the Vatican tried to delay its publication, as did several bishops
whose batting averages in USCCB elections consistently fall below the Mendoza Line. Some of
those bishops then marked the limits of their collegiality by petulantly and
publicly deploring Archbishop Gómez’s letter.
What are those critics thinking now?
For President Biden, who threatened to “shove
my rosary beads” down the throat of anyone who suggested that his was the
party of secularism, led, over the next four years, the most rabidly
pro-“choice” administration in American history — with the president as
cheerleader-in-chief for an unrestricted, unregulated abortion license, on
which he doubled down after the Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs decision
consigned a spurious federal “right” to abortion to constitutional oblivion.
That cheerleading took many forms;
it was grotesquely summed up by Biden’s awarding the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, America’s highest civilian honor, to Cecile
Richards, longtime chieftain of Planned Parenthood.
But that was not all.
During the Biden administration, gender ideology — a frontal
assault on the biblical idea of the human person and a threat to religious
freedom — became embedded in virtually all federal
agencies. Thus it was no surprise that the administration promoted “Pride
Month” and the LGBTQ+ agenda, even as it became empirically
demonstrable that “transitioning” did not improve mental health outcomes over
time, and that surgical interventions and puberty blockers with
gender-dysphoric youngsters deserved
condemnation as child abuse.
And that was still not all.
In pursuing an agenda that could be properly described, not
simply as “un-Catholic” but as anti-Catholic, President Biden worked hand in
hand with another Catholic of the same generation, Nancy Pelosi: who,
like many
other senior officials, helped hide the president’s cognitive deterioration
from the public — until that deception imploded after Biden’s zombie-like
performance in the June 2024 presidential debate.
Pelosi (whose denial that she was involved in the
president’s post-debate defenestration suggests deficient Eighth Commandment
catechesis during the 1950s at St. Leo’s parish in Baltimore’s Little Italy)
and Biden then arranged to hand the Democratic nomination to Kamala Harris: who
was, if anything, even more fiercely devoted to the deconstruction of the
biblical idea of the human person via the abortion license and the LGBTQ+
agenda than Biden and the former House speaker.
I would like to feel pity for the now-former president, but
that’s a steep climb. Those who have watched him for decades have long known
that Joe Biden is a not-so-bright combination
of glibness, ambition and gall, with a tenuous grip on the truth of
his own curriculum vitae and zero understanding of Catholic
ethics as applied to life issues. That an arrogant belief in his own indispensability led
him to put the country at risk by denying the reality of his own incapacities
makes pity even harder to come by.
It should also be said, however, that some responsibility
here may have to be borne by Biden’s pastors in the nation’s capital and in
Delaware. Did they make any attempt to appeal to his piety in bringing him to
recognize the error of his moral judgments about public policy, or to help him
get to grips with his personal circumstances? If not, why not?
As he fades from public view, Joe Biden strikes me as a
strange hybrid of pre-conciliar, Last Hurrah-style, ethno-tribal
Catholicism and post-conciliar Catholic progressivism. He was an accidental
president, nominated because his party gagged at the thought of the
Vermont Menshevik,
Moscow honeymooner Bernie
Sanders, as its presidential candidate.
Yet this accidental president, who reached the office he
craved long after whatever ability he had to meet its demands had dissipated,
did grave damage to Catholic public witness in the United States. He did so at
a time when liberal Protestant wokery, evangelical Protestant lust for access
to power, and secularist aggressions combined to make a mockery of serious
moral reflection in the American public square, and the insights of Catholic
social doctrine were sorely needed.
As they still are.
https://www.ncregister.com/commentaries/joe-biden-when-the-last-hurrah-met-catholic-lite-weigel
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