Sure he does. He said waterboarding is torture and he wants to do that and ‘worse’. So, you disagree with Trump on what constitutes torture.
I believe you are basing this as an interpretation of his comments on Fox and Friends. It does ignore all the followup where he said that this is for ‘retribution’ and ‘to make them suffer.’ He made it very clear that this wasn’t a case of collateral damage. I would suggest watching Trump talk about it on the O’Reilly Factor as I think there can be no room left for doubt on his interpretation.
I believe that the USCCB (a careful reading of Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship would dissuade you that the Church wants single issue voters) or Bishop Kicanas’ comments (who pointed out the complex issues Catholic face when making a vote) would mean that we are not on a Protestant track because you would never say that these organizations or individuals are anything but Catholic.
It really isn’t right to tell Catholics that our Church’s teachings are other than what they are.
From the USCCB document you cited:
“…some issues involve principles that can never be abandoned, such as the fundamental right to life and marriage as the union of one man and one woman. Others reflect our judgment about the best way to apply Catholic principles to policy issues…”
In other words, opposing abortion is an absolute. Other issues are matters of individual application of Catholic principles. So, for example, we might differ on the best trade policies, but not on abortion on demand.
Hillary Clinton is the most abortion promoting person who has ever run for president and is the only candidate promoting abortion on demand and partial birth abortion. Catholics cannot morally vote for her, period.
Now, since the Church has not defined “torture”, we do have some freedom in assessing those things that are “torture” versus those that are merely unpleasant.
What did Trump actually say. He said it’s “…sort of the least form of torture”, also characterizing it as a “minimal” form. Later, and presumably upon reflection, he said “…nobody knows what torture is…”, which is exactly correct. People (initially including Trump) don’t have a good definition of it by which one might judge this thing to be torture and that thing not to be.
I have asked many times on CAF for those who loosely apply the term to define “torture” in a practical way. Nobody ever does.
And the context of the “collateral damage” statement was that of collateral damage, not specifically targeting noncombatants for the sake of doing it.
And Bishop Kicanas has never said it’s acceptable morally to vote for Hillary Clinton or any other abortionist. He is a very liberal outlier in the Church, but he too says abortion is “gravely” wrong.