Your Vote!
Please read the document below to help you discern who you should cast your vote for in the Presidential election
A Brief Catechism for Catholic Voters
Fr. Stephen F. Torraco, PhD
1. Isn’t conscience the same as my own opinions and feelings? And doesn’t
everyone have the right to his or her own conscience?
Conscience is NOT the same as your opinions or feelings. Conscience cannot
be identical with your feelings because conscience is the activity of your
intellect in judging the rightness or wrongness of your actions or omissions,
past, present, or future, while your feelings come from another part of
your soul and should be governed by your intellect and will. Conscience
is not identical with your opinions because your intellect bases its judgment
upon the natural moral law, which is inherent in your human nature and is
identical with the Ten Commandments. Unlike the civil laws made by legislators,
or the opinions that you hold, the natural moral law is not anything that
you invent, but rather discover within yourself and is the governing norm
of your conscience. In short, Conscience is the voice of truth within you,
and your opinions need to be in harmony with that truth. As a Catholic,
you have the benefit of the Church’s teaching authority or
Magisterium endowed upon her by Christ. The
Magisterium assists you and all people of good
will in understanding the natural moral law as it relates to specific issues.
As a Catholic, you have the obligation to be correctly informed and
normed by the teaching of the Church’s
Magisterium. As for your feelings, they need
to be educated by virtue so as to be in harmony with conscience’s voice
of truth. In this way, you will have a sound conscience, according to which
we you will feel guilty when you are guilty, and feel morally upright when
you are morally upright. We should strive to avoid the two opposite extremes
of a lax conscience and a scrupulous conscience. Meeting the obligation
of continually attending to this formation of conscience will increase the
likelihood that, in the actual operation or activity of conscience, you
will act with a certain conscience, which clearly perceives that a given
concrete action is a good action that was rightly done or should be done.
Being correctly informed and certain in the actual operation of conscience
is the goal of the continuing formation of conscience. Otherwise put, you
should strive to avoid being incorrectly informed and doubtful in the actual
judgment of conscience about a particular action or omission. You should
never act on a doubtful conscience.
2. Is it morally permissible to vote for all candidates of a single party?
This would depend on the positions held by the candidates of a single party.
If any one or more of them held positions that were opposed to the natural
moral law, then it would not be morally permissible to vote for all candidates
of this one party. Your correctly informed conscience transcends the bounds
of any one political party.
3. If I think that a pro-abortion candidate will, on balance, do much more
for the culture of life than a pro-life candidate, why may I not vote for
the pro-abortion candidate?
If a political candidate supported abortion, or any other moral evil, such
as assisted suicide and euthanasia, for that matter, it would not be morally
permissible for you to vote for that person. This is because, in voting
for such a person, you would become an accomplice in the moral evil at issue.
For this reason, moral evils such as abortion, euthanasia and assisted suicide
are examples of a “disqualifying issue.” A disqualifying issue is one which
is of such gravity and importance that it allows for no political maneuvering.
It is an issue that strikes at the heart of the human person and is non-negotiable.
A disqualifying issue is one of such enormity that by itself renders a candidate
for office unacceptable regardless of his position on other matters. You
must sacrifice your feelings on other issues because you know that you cannot
participate in any way in an approval of a violent and evil violation of
basic human rights. A candidate for office who supports abortion rights
or any other moral evil has disqualified himself as a person that you can
vote for. You do not have to vote for a person because he is pro-life. But
you may not vote for any candidate who supports abortion rights. Key to
understanding the point above about “disqualifying issues” is the distinction
between policy and moral principle. On the one hand, there can be a legitimate
variety of approaches to accomplishing a morally acceptable goal. For example,
in a society’s effort to distribute the goods of health care to its citizens,
there can be legitimate disagreement among citizens and political candidates
alike as to whether this or that health care plan would most effectively
accomplish society’s goal. In the pursuit of the best possible policy or
strategy, technical as distinct (although not separate) from moral reason
is operative. Technical reason is the kind of reasoning involved in arriving
at the most efficient or effective result. On the other hand, no policy
or strategy that is opposed to the moral principles
of the natural law is morally acceptable. Thus, technical reason should
always be subordinate to and normed by moral
reason, the kind of reasoning that is the activity of conscience and that
is based on the natural moral law.
4. If I have strong feelings or opinions in favor of a particular candidate,
even if he is pro-abortion, why may I not vote for him?
As explained in question 1 above, neither your feelings nor your opinions
are identical with your conscience. Neither your feelings nor your opinions
can take the place of your conscience. Your feelings and opinions should
be governed by your conscience. If the candidate about whom you have strong
feelings or opinions is pro-abortion, then your feelings and opinions need
to be corrected by your correctly informed conscience, which would tell
you that it is wrong for you to allow your feelings and opinions to give
lesser weight to the fact that the candidate supports a moral evil.
5. If I may not vote for a pro-abortion candidate, then should it not also
be true that I can’t vote for a pro-capital punishment candidate?
It is not correct to think of abortion and capital punishment as the very
same kind of moral issue. On the one hand, direct abortion is an intrinsic
evil, and cannot be justified for any purpose or in any circumstances. On
the other hand, the Church has always taught that it is the right and responsibility
of the legitimate temporal authority to defend and preserve the common good,
and more specifically to defend citizens against the aggressor. This defense
against the aggressor may resort to the death penalty if no other means
of defense is sufficient. The point here is that the death penalty is understood
as an act of self-defense on the part of civil society. In more recent times,
in his encyclical Evangelium Vitae,
Pope John Paul II has taught that the need for such self-defense to resort
to the death penalty is “rare, if not virtually nonexistent.” Thus, while
the Pope is saying that the burden of proving the need for the death penalty
in specific cases should rest on the shoulders of the legitimate temporal
authority, it remains true that the legitimate temporal authority alone
has the authority to determine if and when a “rare” case arises that warrants
the death penalty. Moreover, if such a rare case does arise and requires
resorting to capital punishment, this societal act of self-defense would
be a *morally good action* even if it does have the unintended and unavoidable
evil effect of the death of the aggressor. Thus, unlike the case of abortion,
it would be morally irresponsible to rule out all such “rare” possibilities
a priori, just as it would be morally irresponsible to apply the death penalty
indiscriminately.
6. If I think that a candidate who is pro-abortion has better ideas to serve
the poor, and the pro-life candidate has bad ideas that will hurt the poor,
why may I not vote for the candidate that has the better ideas for serving
the poor?
Serving the poor is not only admirable, but also obligatory for Catholics
as an exercise of solidarity. Solidarity has to do with the sharing of both
spiritual and material goods, and with what the Church calls the preferential
option for the poor. This preference means that we have the duty to give
priority to helping those most needful, both materially and spiritually.
Beginning in the family, solidarity extends to every human association,
even to the international moral order. Based on the response to question
3 above, two important points must be made. First, when it comes to the
matter of determining how social and economic policy can best serve the
poor, there can be a legitimate variety of approaches
proposed, and therefore legitimate disagreement
among voters and candidates for office. Secondly, solidarity can never be
at the price of embracing a “disqualifying issue.” Besides, when it comes
to the unborn, abortion is a most grievous offense against solidarity, for
the unborn are surely among society’s most needful.
The right to life is a paramount issue because as Pope John Paul II says
it is “the first right, on which all the others are based, and which cannot
be recuperated once it is lost.” If a candidate for office refuses solidarity
with the unborn, he has laid the ground for refusing solidarity with anyone.
7. If a candidate says that he is personally opposed to abortion but feels
the need to vote for it under the circumstances, doesn’t this candidate’s
personal opposition to abortion make it morally permissible for me to vote
for him, especially if I think that his other views are the best for people,
especially the poor?
A candidate for office who says that he is personally opposed to abortion
but actually votes in favor of it is either fooling himself or trying to
fool you. Outside of the rare case in which a hostage is forced against
his will to perform evil actions with his captors, a person who carries
out an evil action ¾ such as voting for abortion ¾ performs an immoral act,
and his statement of personal opposition to the moral evil of abortion is
either self-delusion or a lie. If you vote for such a candidate, you would
be an accomplice in advancing the moral evil of abortion. Therefore, it
is not morally permissible to vote for such a candidate for office, even,
as explained in questions 3 and 6 above, you think that the candidate’s
other views are best for the poor.
8. What if none of the candidates are completely pro-life?
As Pope John Paul II explains in his encyclical,
Evangelium Vitae (The Gospel of Life), “…when it is
not possible to overturn or completely abrogate a pro-abortion law, an elected
official, whose absolute personal opposition to procured abortion was well
known, could licitly support proposals aimed at limiting the harm done by
such a law and at lessening its negative consequences at the level of general
opinion and morality. This does not in fact represent an illicit cooperation
with an unjust law, but rather a legitimate and proper attempt to limit
its evil aspects.” Logically, it follows from these words of the Pope that
a voter may likewise vote for that candidate who will most likely limit
the evils of abortion or any other moral evil at issue.
9. What if one leading candidate is anti-abortion except in the cases of
rape or incest, another leading candidate is completely pro-abortion, and
a trailing candidate, not likely to win, is completely anti-abortion. Would
I be obliged to vote for the candidate not likely to win?
In such a case, the Catholic voter may clearly choose to vote for the candidate
not likely to win. In addition, the Catholic voter may assess that voting
for that candidate might only benefit the completely pro-abortion candidate,
and, precisely for the purpose of curtailing the evil of abortion, decide
to vote for the leading candidate that is anti-abortion but not perfectly
so. This decision would be in keeping with the words of the Pope quoted
in question 8 above.
10. What if all the candidates from whom I have to choose are pro-abortion?
Do I have to abstain from voting at all? What do I do?
Obviously, one of these candidates is going to win the election. Thus, in
this dilemma, you should do your best to judge which candidate would do
the least moral harm. However, as explained in question 5 above, you should
not place a candidate who is pro-capital punishment (and anti-abortion)
in the same moral category as a candidate who is pro-abortion. Faced with
such a set of candidates, there would be no moral dilemma, and the clear
moral obligation would be to vote for the candidate who is pro-capital punishment,
not necessarily because he is pro-capital punishment, but because he is
anti-abortion.
11. Is not the Church’s stand that abortion must be illegal a bit of an
exception? Does not the Church generally hold that government should restrict
its legislation of morality significantly?
The Church’s teaching that abortion should be illegal is not an exception.
St. Thomas Aquinas put it this way: “Wherefore human laws do not forbid
all vices, from which the virtuous abstain, but only the more grievous
vices, from which it is possible for the majority to abstain; and
chiefly those that are to the hurt of others, without the prohibition of
which human society could not be maintained: thus human law prohibits
murder, theft and such like.” [ emphasis
added]. Abortion qualifies as a grievous vice that hurts others, and the
lack of prohibition of this evil by society is something by which human
society cannot be maintained. As Pope John Paul II has emphasized, the denial
of the right to life, in principle, sets the stage, in principle, for the
denial of all other rights.
12. What about elected officials who happen to be of the same party affiliation?
Are they committing a sin by being in the same party, even if they don’t
advocate pro-choice views? Are they guilty by association?
Being of the same political party as those who advocate pro-abortion is
indeed a serious evil IF I belong to this political party IN ORDER
TO ASSOCIATE MYSELF with that party’s advocacy
of pro-abortion policies. However, it can also be true that being of such
a political party has as its purpose to change the policies of the party.
Of course, if this is the purpose, one would have to consider whether it
is reasonable to think the political party’s policies can be changed. Assuming
that it is reasonable to think so, then it would be morally justifiable
to remain in that political party. Remaining in that
political party cannot be instrumental in the advancing of pro-abortion
policies (especially if I am busily striving to change the party’s policies)
as can my VOTING for candidates or for a political party with a pro-abortion
policy.
13. What about voting for a pro-abortion person for something like state
treasurer, in which case the candidate would have no say on matters of life
in the capacity of her duties, it just happens to be her personal position.
This would not be a sin, right?
If someone were running for state treasurer and that candidate made it a
point to state publicly that he was in favor of exterminating people over
the age of 70, would you vote for him? The fact that the candidate has that
evil in his mind tells you that there are easily other evils in his mind;
and the fact that he would publicly state it is a danger signal. If personal
character matters in a political candidate, and personal character involves
the kind of thoughts a person harbors, then such a candidate who publicly
states that he is in favor of the evil of exterminating people over the
age of 70 - or children who are unborn - has also disqualified himself from
receiving a Catholic’s vote. I would go further and say that such a candidate,
in principle - in the light of the natural law - disqualifies himself from
public office.
14. Is it a mortal sin to vote for a pro-abortion candidate?
Except in the case in which a voter is faced with all pro-abortion candidates
(in which case, as explained in question 8 above, he or she strives to determine
which of them would cause the let damage in this regard), a candidate that
is pro-abortion disqualifies himself from receiving a Catholic’s vote. This
is because being pro-abortion cannot simply be placed alongside the candidate's
other positions on Medicare and unemployment, for example; and this is because
abortion is intrinsically evil and cannot be morally justified for any reason
or set of circumstances. To vote for such a candidate even with the knowledge
that the candidate is pro-abortion is to become an accomplice in the moral
evil of abortion. If the voter also knows this, then the voter sins mortally.
COPYRIGHT © 2002
Stephen F. Torraco