Earlier this year, when Georgetown University announced that
Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis.,
the chairman of the House Budget Committee, would defend his budget in a
public address, almost 90 faculty members at the Jesuit institution
publicly
denounced his interpretation of Church doctrine. While the media generally presented the harsh judgment as a sign that
Ryan’s
budget proposals violated core beliefs of his Church, most news stories
failed to examine why the subsequent appearance of Kathleen Sebelius,
the secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, at a
Georgetown graduation event did not provoke a comparable furor. Sebelius
is widely viewed as the architect of a federal contraception mandate
denounced by the U.S. bishops as an
“unprecedented” threat to the free
exercise of Catholic institutions, but the same group of Georgetown
faculty apparently saw no eed to register their disapproval. During the final bruising months of a presidential election that could
hinge on the shifting views of Catholic
“swing” voters, Americans can
expect to witness further disputes that showcase legitimate questions
about the practical impact of Ryan's policies and partisan hit jobs
that fail to provide a holistic treatment of Catholic teaching. Now,
Bishop Robert Morlino of Madison, Ryan’s bishop, has waded into
this election-year minefield, clearly concerned that a valued member of
his flock is being unfairly attacked by partisan forces. In a column that will be posted on his diocesan website tomorrow, Aug.
16, Bishop Morlino vouches for Ryan’s Catholic bona fides, but stresses
that his remarks should not be viewed as an endorsement of Ryan or any
candidate.
“I know him very well. He is in regular communication with his bishop. I am defending his reputation because I am the one who, as his
diocesan bishop, should have something to say about this, if anyone
does,” Bishop Morlino told the Register during an Aug. 15 telephone
interview. “Since others have, I believe, unfairly attacked his reputation, I have
to look out for his good name. That is Church law. If someone disagrees
with Paul, he is free to do that. But not on the basis of reputation
destruction, really calumny,” he added.
“They say things about him that aren’t true. I am not a defender of
Paul Ryan; I am a defender of reputations of Catholics in the public
sphere whose reputations are unjustly attacked.”
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