Your example simply does not prove your point. In fact your point is not even very clear. Are you saying that voting for a pro-choice Republican is what you call “strategic voting”? If you want to make the example attractive you have to come up with one that makes sense, and one in which others will say “Yes, I would do that too in those circumstances”. Otherwise you are just arguing semantics.
Let me explain it one more time in general terms:
First, I’m talking about a congressional or senatorial candidate, not a presidential candidate. It’s pretty clear that a pro-life presidential candidate is the best choice.
This is the hypothetical situation that I propose: Candidate A is from a party that stands to gain a supermajority if he is elected. His party is very pro-abortion, and if elected, they will surely advance the abortion agenda. He personally is pro-life, and votes his conscience.
Candidate B, from the opposing party, is not clearly pro-life. While he may give lip service to his supposed pro-life stance when it is favorable to gain him votes, he does so. He, however, has voted for some legislation in the past that clearly adds to the abortion problem. Call him either wishy-washy or pro-choice, it doesn’t matter which, I could agree with both or either.
Voting for either one of these candidates can be looked at two ways:
A vote for Candidate A is a vote for pro-life. However, it also may have a secondary effect that increases the number of abortions, as his party will have the power to do so at their will as they have the supermajority. His single vote within his party is ineffective, as he is vastly outnumbered by the pro-choicers.
A vote for Candidate B could be a vote for pro-choice. IF the senario that I would propose were not in place, it would definitely be a pro-choice vote. However, IF the reason for voting for Candidate B was so that Candidate A’s party would not gain the majority i.e. thereby thwarting their party’s efforts to further abortion, it would in effect be a pro-life vote.
Understand?
The party can do more damage to the pro-llife movement than any individual candidate.
Of course, IF one were to vote for Candidate B because of their (sometimes or always) pro-choice stand, and not to thwart the party of Candidate A, that would be morally objectionable.
In other words, a vote for Candidate A because of his pro-life stand and a vote for Candidate B because of his party’s pro-life stand are morally acceptable under a very strict, very unusual, extremely rare situation such as what I described above.
Would this ever happen? Probably not. I’d be very surprised if it ever did. But one is not prevented from trying to determine the reasonable effects of one’s vote down the line. In this scenario,the assumption is that the party is more powerful than the individual, at least as far as the results of that particular election are concerned. You can disagree that such is the case, but the motivation of a voter must be taken into consideration.
If what you and Bob are saying is that one can never vote for a pro-choice candidate precisely to advance abortions, that is a correct interpretation of the Church’s teaching.
Answer this question, if you will (Bob won’t):
If voting for Candidate A, who is pro-life, has the most reasonable outcome to increase the number of abortions vs. voting for Candidate B, who is pro-choice, and in voting for him the net result would be a stability or decrease in the number of abortions, do you feel it is morally objectionable to vote for Candidate B?
If yes, please explain your reasoning.
And please don’t be like Bob and accuse me of twisting the words in order to justify abortion…please. I hope it’s clear that I’m not trying to do that, but attempting to explain how someone in good conscience could vote against a pro-life candidate in order to have a net effect of decreasing abortions.