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Presidential debate reflects Catholic concerns over economy

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Economic issues dominated the discussion at the first presidential debate of the election season, reflecting the widespread concern among Catholics, along with other American voters, about the national economy.

Frank Newport, editor in chief of Gallup, told CNA that when American voters are asked to rank election issues in order of importance, “the economy swamps everything else.”

Oct. 3 marked the first presidential debate of the 2012 election season. President Barack Obama and Republican candidate Mitt Romney squared off in a 90-minute debate at the University of Denver in Colorado.

The debate had a largely economic tone, as candidates talked about the nation’s struggling economy, high unemployment levels and soaring debt. They also discussed the role of government, health care reform and aid programs such as Social Security and Medicare.

Romney charged that Obama has failed to provide effective economic leadership over the past four years, while the president argued that Romney’s plan to reduce the deficit without raising taxes is unrealistic.

Prominent moral issues such as abortion, “gay marriage” and the federal contraception mandate were not discussed in the first meeting of the two contenders.

However, when asked about the federal deficit, Romney responded, “I think it’s not just an economic issue. I think it’s a moral issue.”

“I think it’s frankly not moral for my generation to keep spending massively more than we take in, knowing those burdens are going to be passed on to the next generation,” he said.

Newport explained that it is hard to judge how many Catholics would agree with Romney’s assessment of the debt as a critical “moral issue” because the question has not been commonly raised in polls.

However, he said, “Catholics are average on a lot of things” and tend to be representative of the general electorate on many campaign issues.

In September, Gallup asked voters about their perceptions of where the economy was headed. Newport said that “Catholics were exactly like the overall average.”

Among all Americans, 41 percent believed the economy was getting better, while 54 percent believed it was getting worse. Among Catholics, 41 percent believed the economy was getting better, while 53 percent believed it was getting worse.

Newport said that this pattern of Catholics tending to “mirror” the general American electorate holds true on many topics. And U.S. voters consistently rank the economy at the top of their list of concerns in this election, he added. [More]

SOURCE

CNA/EWTN News

 
 
 
 

5 Comments

  1. Elinor Melley says:

    Morally speaking, we have a responsibility to not burden others with our indiscretionery overall spending. We are obliged to keep our “house” in order to not pass on to the next generation the bill for something that they had no say in. Would it be okay to recklessly incur incredible debt in our own households and then expect our descendants to clean up the mess when we are long gone? The next generations will have their own economic burdens without our piling on.

    • Concerned says:

      So if it is economically unfeasable it is okay to ignore the mandate of Jesus to take care of those who are in need?

    • Catholic Lady says:

      If I am hungry, cold and sick I am not worrying about the next generaton, I am worrying about where the next meal will come from, where I will sleep tonight and if I will live to see the light of another day..

    • bill bannon says:

      The problem that no one at the debate mentioned is that Romney Ryan are only thrifty as to the poor. They are every bit as capable of a one trillion dollar war as Bush proved to be. Vote for them indeed because Obama’s views accept intrinsic evil in laws but the Catholic beatification of Romney Ryan is a low point in our intellectual example to the nation. Romney said he’d create 12 million jobs but that is the exact number of jobs that Wall Street’s Moody’s Analytics says the economy will create on its own. Romney said he’d increase medicaid by inflation and one percent. Obama was too jaded or preoccupied with his anniversary to nail him. That is a large cut in medicaid because medical inflation is 7.5% for 2013…over double what Romney would give low income seniors, pregnant
      women and disabled. But Catholics so want to be proud of their vote that they are pretending Romney Ryan are two of the apostles.

      • Catholic Lady says:

        Just as a chain is as strong as it’s weekest link so is a nation…church etc. In aiding our brother we aid ourselves….

 
 

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