Election 2020: Left, Right, or Politically Homeless?
In the middle of a challenging presidential campaign, the Initiative on Catholic Social Thought and Public Life and the Archdiocese of Washington’s DCCatholic Young Adult Ministry Theology on Tap program are partnering to help young U.S. Catholics think critically about applying Catholic teachings to the 2020 election. Does our faith shape our politics, or is it the other way around?
A diverse group of Catholic leaders will discuss:
- How should our current context—including a renewed national focus on racism and racial injustice, a global pandemic, an economic crisis, and a “throwaway culture” that fails to protect the most vulnerable among us—affect our actions as citizens?
- How should Catholics view the vocation of politics?
- What are our responsibilities as Catholics in the face of bitter polarization in our political life? How can we stay informed as Catholic voters?
- Where do young Catholics fit in the politics of 2020? What should guide our choices and priorities? Issues? Character? Party? Our own interests?
- Should U.S. Catholics align with a particular political viewpoint or party, or are we politically homeless?
- Does our Catholic faith compel us to vote for a particular candidate? What does it mean for Catholics to have a “well-formed conscience”? Can we disagree about who to vote for?
- In a discussion on political engagement, is the decision regarding who to vote for the end of the conversation, or just the beginning?
Participants
- Meghan Clark is an associate professor of moral theology at St. John’s University, a senior fellow of the Vincentian Center for Church and Society, and a faculty expert for the Holy See Mission to the United Nations.
- Abigail Galván is the communications and program officer of the Crimsonbridge Foundation, the former development director of the Religious Freedom Institute, and a V Encuentro region IV delegate.
- Charlene Howard is a religion teacher and the religion department chair at Archbishop Carroll High School in Washington, DC. She is a former adult faith formation instructor in the Archdiocese of Washington and a former principal and teacher at St. Francis DeSales Catholic School.
- Stephen White is the executive director of the Catholic Project of The Catholic University of America, which seeks to promote the role of the laity in the Church and society. He is also a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.
Kim Daniels, associate director of the Initiative, will moderate the conversation.
This Salt and Light Gathering is for Catholics under 40 years old in Washington who seek to explore the links between faith, Catholic social thought, and their lives and work and is part of the Initiative’s Faith and the Faithful series. This gathering is co-sponsored with the Archdiocese of Washington’s DCCatholic Young Adult Ministry Theology on Tap program.