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Wisconsin Dispute Exposes Catholic Split On Unions

Catholic Split Unions

First Posted: 02/28/11 10:04 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

By Piet Levy
Religion News Service

(RNS) The fierce budget battle in Wisconsin that's pitting unions against Republican Gov. Scott Walker has also pitted the state's top Roman Catholic bishops against each other in a series of public exchanges over the church's historic support for unions.

The war of words -- however polite -- has exposed a longstanding rift between the church's progressive and conservative wings, reopened in the birthplace of the modern labor movement.

Walker's budget-repair bill requires public employees to pay more for their pensions and health care, and restricts collective bargaining power for most. The plan has prompted impassioned protests by thousands at the state capitol in Madison, and sent Democratic lawmakers into exile to prevent a vote.

Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki kicked it off with a statement on Feb. 16 that, quoting Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI, said it was "a mistake to marginalize or dismiss unions as impediments to economic growth."

A week later, Bishop Robert C. Morlino of Madison issued his own statement, emphasizing the church's neutrality. That same day, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops publicly sided with Listecki, praising him for his "clear statement."

Morlino, writing in his diocesan newspaper, The Catholic Herald, said he and the statewide Wisconsin Catholic Conference were neutral, even though the Catholic Church has long sided with the rights of unionized workers.

"The question to which the dilemma boils down is rather simple on its face: Is the sacrifice which union members, including school teachers, are called upon to make proportionate to the relative sacrifice called for from all in difficult economic times?" Morlino wrote.

"The teaching of the church allows for persons of good will to disagree as to which horn of this dilemma should be chosen because there would be reasonable justification available for either alternative."

To be sure, Morlino has emerged as a hero of the Catholic right. In the heat of the 2008 campaign, he blasted vice presidential nominee Joe Biden and then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi for "stepping on the pope's turf -- and mine" in appealing to church fathers for their support of abortion rights.

In 2009, Morlino fired a female church worker for using male and female imagery for God in her 2003 Master's thesis.

Morlino argued that unions should not be subjected to the decision of political parties or be too closely linked with them. Conservative Catholic activists soon rushed to Morlino's defense, with the Rev. Robert Sirico of the Michigan-based Acton Institute praising him as a "model of clarity" in the fractious debate.

"It is also useful to keep in mind that the Catholic position on unions is not an endorsement of all unions, in all places at all times and under every circumstance," Sirico wrote at Catholicvote.org.

The Rev. Bryan N. Massingale, associate professor of theological ethics at Marquette University in Milwaukee, doesn't necessarily see a conflict between Morlino and Listecki -- at least from the statements.

"That's not the way Catholic bishops tend to operate," he said. "They tend to want to present a unified public voice."

But Michael Fleet, a political scientist at Marquette, sees it differently.

"Obviously (Morlino) wouldn't have written (his letter) unless some clarification or reframing was necessary," he said. "If you think about it, Morlino would write a short letter if he agreed with Listecki, but he wrote a longer letter articulating how (Listecki's statement) should be understood."

For their part, priests in Listecki's archdiocese sided with their archbishop. The Milwaukee Archdiocese Priests Alliance released a statement Feb. 25, that noticeably made no mention of Morlino's statement in calling for the governor to restore collective bargaining rights for the unions.

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By Piet Levy Religion News Service (RNS) The fierce budget battle in Wisconsin that's pitting unions against Republican Gov. Scott Walker has also pitted the state's top Roman Catholic bishops agains...
By Piet Levy Religion News Service (RNS) The fierce budget battle in Wisconsin that's pitting unions against Republican Gov. Scott Walker has also pitted the state's top Roman Catholic bishops agains...
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11:44 AM on 03/06/2011
I am Catholic And pro union and dont care where the Bishops stand on this issue.
12:11 AM on 03/06/2011
As a young student in Catholic in the 50's and 60's the Catholic Church always supported labor as that was the majority of the parishoners. Since then, the church has taken a extreme right turn with big business and the GOP and do NOT support labor, union or non union. I am glad to hear the one official did but that is not the norm. The church is an arm of the GOP and 90% of those of us who were raised and educated in the church schools do not raise our kids and grandkids in the church because of this extreme conservatism. Jesus was a union leader but the white male leaders in the Catholic church are looking for $$$$ to fight abortion, gays and stem cell research. Very sad, this will be their demise.
01:06 AM on 03/06/2011
Wonderful post, thank you.
08:09 AM on 03/08/2011
BINGO!!

Wilbur (former Catholic, now a human being instead)
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
capitaldysfunction
White male never voted Republican
04:38 AM on 03/05/2011
If unions are allowed to organize, the nuns may join them and revolt.
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Bobrobert
Go God... Jesus rocks... the Spirit is very cool..
08:50 PM on 03/04/2011
Must have a bunch on Catholic businessmen in his church...

I know when I was trying to start a union in a Catholic hospital the Archbishop of Baltimore blasted the nuns for --- lying about union organizers...

:-)
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glasgal
08:20 PM on 03/04/2011
Here in Madison many of us Catholics have found Morlino reprehensible for some time. He can take his views and swallow them cause I have stopped giving to the church till he is dead or they remove him and I have spoken to many who feel the same way.
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FoxIslander
Fox Island...no relation to Fox News
03:59 PM on 03/04/2011
I would suspect the good bishops have many more relevant problems to concern themselves with rather than the church stance on trade unionism.
11:54 AM on 03/06/2011
Yea like surviving! very few people go to church because of their conservatism. That catholic church is almost dead- when you protect the pedophiles,the elite, Big business and support what is morally wrong- I am sure the people catch on and see what side you are on.
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FoxIslander
Fox Island...no relation to Fox News
12:59 PM on 03/06/2011
...just one of many reasons why I was raised catholic, went to catholic schools, but havent been to church in 15 yrs. I'm tired of all of these churches getting involved in politics. Not so long ago a bishop announced he wouldnt give Sen. Kerry communion because of Kerry's pro-choice opinions.
11:43 AM on 03/03/2011
One of the biggest disappointments (aside from the obvious dissappointment) is the Catholic Church's rush to jump on the funamentalist bandwagon because of gay rights and a woman's right to choose. We can never go back. In my state Catholic Charities, the largest charity organization in the state stopped all adoptions rather than comply with the law that allows gay people to adopt. So that the WI bishops are divided is no surprise, now that they can't allow sexually immature men into the seminary they will find some other way to curry favor with the Christian right.
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09:08 AM on 03/03/2011
Everyone needs to see "Constantine's Sword", being aired on Free Speech TV.
08:22 AM on 03/03/2011
I don't care what these men in skirts have to say about anything! That goes for gay marriage and abortion as much as unions and the poor. Tax these fiends and imagine how many of our problems we could pay for.

They are entitled to government money from grants--to "green" their offices, update equipment, they got 100 million for disaster relief, they run their hospitals and clinics with money for Medicare and Medicaid. You want an opinoin--pay up like the rest of us--otherwise keep your opinions to yourselves, and don't go taking up collections to fight gay marriage, and preach from the pulpit on pending legiislation--it is a violation of your tax exempt status.
05:24 PM on 03/03/2011
"...these men in skirts...."

Wake up blue53! HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS of men wear skirts today. They are called sarongs, lungis and dhatis in India and southeast Asia. North African men wear caftans. Millions of them. In the West, Scots wear kilts. Some Irish and English men do, too.

The cassocks of priests (primarily worn at liturgies) and the robes of judges and monks comprise a vey tiny fraction of that global category, textile, fabric (woven or knitted) called "dress."

Good heavens, watch the news! Watch CNN! Lift your gravestone a little.

Finally, get used to preachers preaching from the pulpit on politics. Thank God for Martin Luther King -- and African American churches -- for preaching the politics of civil rights, issues of justice and who not to vote for (if they blocked the way of justice).
01:08 AM on 03/06/2011
If churches has to pay property taxes... just think....
12:33 PM on 03/02/2011
So--it seems that the WI catholic church has one foot in each camp. That will make certain they are on the side of the winners no matter what.

How provindential.
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David Speakman
Silicon Valley-based writer and law scholar.
05:54 AM on 03/02/2011
I'm grateful for a pro-labor ally ... but the Church is more than a little hypocritical here. If the Catholic Church allowed collective bargaining - then we'd probably have women priests by now.
03:37 PM on 03/02/2011
How can you say Church in this instance? There isn't a consensus.
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David Speakman
Silicon Valley-based writer and law scholar.
09:33 PM on 03/02/2011
Consensus? It's the Catholic Church - what the Pope says is law. End of story.
03:16 PM on 03/04/2011
Right. Catholics support workers being able to bargain collectively for benefits; they do not believe the truth is democratic. Apples and oranges.
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BabsBP
My micro-bio is empty, and I like it that way.
12:15 AM on 03/02/2011
I wonder what Pope John Paul would say. Unions and Catholicism worked hand in hand in Poland for a beautiful result.
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NYC123
10:52 PM on 03/01/2011
Sorry I do believe you block commentaries! You have a lot of gray in your quiver of exceptions!
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NYC123
07:34 AM on 03/02/2011
I am disturbed that you are blocking my commentaries! While at the same time accepting just about any comments that denigrate the Christian faith, our stewardship and our Christ! I do not know how you explain that?
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NeoConsAreFinished
Fight the Ah mer I cun talibanned
02:19 AM on 03/03/2011
It is easy to denigrate. After all you are a believer of a myth that perpetuates one of the greatest cons in human history.
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