CatholicVote.org
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| Founded | 2008 |
|---|---|
| Type | 501(c)(4) non-profit |
| Focus | Roman Catholic political advocacy |
| Location |
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Area served | United States |
Key people | Kelsey Reinhardt (president) Joshua Mercer (co-founder, vice president Brian Burch (co-founder, senior advisor) |
| Website | www.CatholicVote.org |
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| Part of a series of articles on |
| Abortion and the Catholic Church |
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Official opposition |
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CatholicVote.org is a conservative,[1][2][3][4] non-profit political advocacy group based in the United States. While the organization acknowledges the authority of the Magisterium, it is independent of the Catholic Church.[5]
Structure
[edit | edit source]CatholicVote.org is divided into three organizations:
- CatholicVote.org Political Action Committee (CatholicVote PAC) is the group's connected political action committee; its goal is to financially support political candidates who "will be faithful stewards of Catholic social teaching and the common good".[5] In 2010, it made campaign contributions to six Republicans and one Democrat.[11]
- CatholicVote.org Education Fund is a 501(c)3 tax-deductible program which comprises two units: the CatholicVote.org Education Fund and the CatholicVote.org Legal Action Fund.[citation needed]
History
[edit | edit source]Domain name
[edit | edit source]The CatholicVote.org domain name was first used by the Catholic Alliance in early 2000.[12] The Catholic Alliance was a grassroots group of Americans who agreed with the platform of the fundamentalist evangelical Protestant Christian Coalition but wished to widen the Coalition's scope to include Catholics.[13] The Catholic Alliance, formed in 1995, held the website until mid-2002. The next owner of the domain name was Larry Cirignano, founder of Catholic Vote, later called Catholic Citizenship. He used the domain for six years until mid-2008.[14][15] The Fidelis Center began operating the domain in October 2008, initially redirecting it to CatholicVote.com. The first published articles linked on the site included ones by co-founders Brian Burch and Joshua Mercer. The Fidelis Center subsequently sold the domain to Fidelis, a related, but independent 501(c)4 organization which operates the domain today.[16]
Activism
[edit | edit source]Marriage and sexuality
[edit | edit source]On June 25, 2015, one day before same-sex marriage became legal everywhere in the United States, CatholicVote.org uploaded a video onto YouTube called "Not Alone".[17] The video features Catholic people who oppose same-sex marriage defending this belief, saying that people should not hate or dislike those who oppose same-sex marriage.[18][19] It quickly received a minimum of a million views on YouTube,[17] where it received a massive backlash due to the video's message.[18] On YouTube, "Not Alone" both received many more dislikes than likes.[17][18] Parodies of the video appeared very quickly.[17][18] According to Catholic News Agency, many websites condemned the video, calling the participants "bigots" or "anti-gay".[19] CatholicVote.org president Brian Burch said "literally tens of thousands of people are emailing, saying: 'thank you for speaking up for me. I don't agree with the Supreme Court decision, but I don't hate anyone.' "[19]
In June 2022, CatholicVote.org urged parents to check out any LGBT-themed books from their local libraries so that no children would be able to see them.[20]
Anti-abortion
[edit | edit source]"Imagine Spot 1" was the first release of the national media campaign "Life: Imagine the Potential" in 2009. In ten days it recorded over 700,000 hits.[21] The commercial centers around the story of President Barack Obama, showing an ultrasound image and saying that despite a hard childhood, the unborn child will grow up to be President of the United States.[22] The advert was rejected by both NBC for airing during the Super Bowl[21] and CNN for airing during coverage of President Obama's first State of the Union Address.[23]
A second commercial was also released in 2009, "Imagine Spot 2". This commercial featured Nelson Mandela. It aired in selected markets during the American Idol season 8 finale.[6]
Other activism
[edit | edit source]In 2010, CatholicVote.org organized a petition urging the United States Postal Service to issue a Mother Teresa commemorative stamp despite opposition by the Freedom From Religion Foundation and similar groups.[24]
See also
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- Catholic Church and politics in the United States
- Homosexuality and Roman Catholicism
- Catholic Church and abortion
- American Life League
References
[edit | edit source]- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ Conservative Catholics rally against contraception mandate
- ^ Boston Globe op-ed: Faith reduced to caricature[dead link]
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ a b CatholicVote About "CatholicVote Civic Action is inspired and organized by faithful Catholic laity. For this reason, we do not claim to speak for any individual bishop or the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. We represent the voices of millions of Catholics across America who seek to renew our country and our culture, in full communion with and 100% faithful to the Magisterium of the Catholic Church."
- ^ a b Anti-Abortion Ad Scores with 'American Idol'
- ^ NY Observer: Anti-Rudy Catholics Plan Their Assault
- ^ National Journal: Conservative Catholics' New Advocates[permanent dead link]
- ^ BeliefNet: New Fidelis Anti-Abortion, Anti-Gay Marriage Video
- ^ NYT: A Fight Among Catholics Over Which Party Best Reflects Church Teachings
- ^ [1] Donation Recipients
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- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ a b NBC rejects pro-life ad using Obama
- ^ Facing Tough Washington Climate, Abortion Foes Move Debate Online
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
External links
[edit | edit source]- Official website
- "Imagine Spot 1" from the campaign "Life: Imagine the Potential"
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- Organizations based in Madison, Wisconsin
- Catholicism and politics
- Organizations established in 2008
- Anti-abortion organizations in the United States
- American Christian political organizations
- Catholic Church and abortion
- 2015 controversies in the United States
- 2015 in LGBTQ history
- 2015 in American politics
- Political controversies in the United States
- Religious controversies in the United States
- Opposition to same-sex marriage in the United States
- Conservative organizations in the United States