*
Proportionate reasons or ‘other morally grave reasons’ ) to vote for a pro-choice candidate
*) wording USCCB guide
I have morally grave reasons to vote for a pro-life candidate over a pro-choice candidate only if I can trust that s/he is serious about his/her stance and that in practice, not just in theory, s/he will (be able to) do something about it. From past evidence I have no reason to trust the Republican Party on much, and certainly not on the issue of abortion, at least not on the federal level.
Republican-appointed Supreme Court Chief Justice Roberts confirmation hearing:
Link:
gpo.gov:80/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-108shrg92548/html/CHRG-108shrg92548.htm
Senator Durbin. Understood. I have been an attorney,
represented a client, sometimes argued a position that I did
not necessarily buy, personally. And so I am asking you today
what is your position on Roe v. Wade?
**Mr. Roberts. I don’t–Roe v. Wade is the settled law of the
land. **It is not–it’s a little more than settled. It was
reaffirmed in the face of a challenge that it should be
overruled in the Casey decision. Accordingly, it’s the settled
law of the land. There’s nothing in my personal views that
would prevent me from fully and faithfully applying that
precedent, as well as Casey.
Indeed, in Casey a Supreme Court with
eight out of nine Republican-appointed justices has in effect re-affirmed Roe V. Wade. So if a Supreme Court with eight Republican-appointed justices does not overturn Wade, on what rational grounds should I hope that the next few conservative appointments will change that?
Give me a break, don’t be fooled folks!
Inaction and lying by pro-life politicians (and inaction by appointed Supreme Court justices) alone could be morally grave reasons, and proportionate reasons, enough to neutralize the theoretically morally grave reasons of not voting for a pro-choice candidate, especially when you do not vote for that candidate because of the pro-choice stance (only the ‘because of’ would be formal cooperation with evil, c.f. Cardinal Ratzinger, USCCB).
Yet then there can also be positive morally grave reasons, and proportionate reasons, to vote for a pro-choice candidate, when you do not vote for that candidate because of the pro-choice stance.
For example, if you are convinced that the policies of the pro-choice candidate will result in less economic downward pressure on the middle class, and thus in less economic reasons for women to have abortions, then it is a reasonable assumption that in practical terms (that is what it has to be all about, not theoretical blabber) the abortion rate will actually decrease, relative to the policies of the alleged pro-life candidate who otherwise will not do, or will not be able to do, anything substantial about the abortion situation directly.
If on top of that the other social policies of the pro-choice candidate are also judged to be considered better and even life-saving, and more in line with Catholic teaching, than the social policies of the alleged pro-life candidate, and/or if the pro-choice candidate is less of a warmonger than the pro-life candidate, then the issue of sufficient other grave moral reasons, or proportionate reasons, becomes a no-brainer for me, and for many other Catholics who sincerely strive to be in line with Catholic teaching.
In summary, both the neutralizing and the positive morally grave reasons combined are more than enough for me to overcome the mere theoretical promise by the GOP to do enough about abortion, a theoretical promise that in practice has failed miserably. If I had good reasons to believe that on the legislative front anything substantial about abortion in this country (especially on the federal level) would happen by voting GOP, this would change things. But I have no such reasons, or at the very least, no sufficient reasons, to believe that.
Don’t forget: the moral premise that you should vote for a pro-life candidate must obviously be based on the assumption that s/he will in reality act on his/her stance in a sufficient fashion. If a candidate merely says to be pro-life, that in itself is not a sufficient moral reason to vote for that candidate. You have to look at the issues practically, and not from the naive standpoint of listening to some magical words by some political Pied Pipers and then running after them. After all, we are followers of Jesus Christ, not followers of The Pied Piper. Catholics are not required to leave their brains outside the voting booth. In fact, they are morally obliged not to do so.