The Canadian Council of Churches has teamed up with five of its allied agencies to publish the first church election guide geared to the 2015 federal election.
(Download the CCCöÏÓăÊÓÆ”app Federal Election Resource at ).
Catholics wonât be far behind this ecumenical effort. Both the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace are at work on their guides. More locally, Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Toronto plans to have its votersâ guide out in the summer.
Catholic Voice, a Toronto group that made its first foray into elections during last yearöÏÓăÊÓÆ”app Ontario municipal elections, has begun organizing to host all-candidates meetings in four or five parishes as soon as the election is officially called.
The Archdiocese of Toronto waits until the writ is dropped before once again encouraging parishes to hold all-candidates meetings.
âWe certainly encourage all Catholics to be informed and educated voters,â said archdiocese spokesman Neil MacCarthy. âFirst and foremost, all are encouraged to exercise their democratic right to vote.â
Campaign Life Coalition has already been active in Conservative riding associations trying to nominate pro-life candidates.
Looking at the Irish vote in favour of gay marriage and the Liberal Party of CanadaöÏÓăÊÓÆ”app recent policy against pro-life candidates, political scientist Ann Ward isnât so sure the church voice has much influence on how people vote.
âThe influence is declining, I think,â Ward, a political science professor at ReginaöÏÓăÊÓÆ”app Campion College, told The Catholic Register. âPerhaps the churches are having less impact than they ever have.â
The Canadian Council of Churchesâ guide is a 15-page summary of issues from defence policy to poverty and climate change, each introducing thoughtful questions for candidates at all-candidates meetings. It stands in marked contrast to todayöÏÓăÊÓÆ”app poll-driven, highly centralized, social-media-focused political campaigns. It assumes Christian voters are undecided and discerning their best choice based on an analysis of issues.
âIt may not be the way politics works (today),â said Citizens for Public Justice executive director Joe Gunn. âIt may be the way that faith communities work.â
CPJ was one of the five contributors to the CCC election guide. The ecumenical social justice group will have its own guide out by July focusing on poverty, climate change and refugee policy.
Sober, careful analysis may stand in contrast to the emotional appeal of campaign advertising, but that doesnât mean thereöÏÓăÊÓÆ”app no demand for what the churches offer, said Gunn.
âWhy not talk about important issues?â he asked. âWeâre in the business of leading people into deeper reflection and having conversations.â
âWe are not fighting the election of 1972,â insisted CCC general secretary Karen Hamilton. âThe Federal Election Resource is also on our web site and will be on Facebook and Twitter.â
But Hamilton is convinced that there has to be more than tweets and viral videos to how we think and talk about politics.
âHave we become a faceless society where all we are is Facebook and Twitter?â she asks.
The guide is carefully and properly non-partisan, said Hamilton.
But that doesnât mean it doesnât have a point of view.
âIs it neutral? No. ItöÏÓăÊÓÆ”app a proclamation of the Kingdom,â she said. âThe questions that are raised are questions that folk of deep faith believe resonate with the biblical and theological witness of the Church down through 2,000 years.â
âIt doesnât say, âVote for this or that party.â But some of the recommendations are quite transparent against this or that party,â said Concordia University theologian Lucian Turcescu.
âIt doesnât look neutral to me. In quite a few cases they were obviously targeting the Conservative party.â
Turcescu teaches university courses about politics and the Church, looking at different approaches to the church-state divide in Eastern Europe, Latin America and elsewhere.
Tiptoeing around the partisan nature of politics in fear of offending somebody or other isnât helping anybody. On the other hand, tying the Church to a political party or cause is almost always a disaster for the Church, Turcescu said. The only way to fight aggressive and doctrinaire secularization is for churches to wade in on the side of more and better political debate, he said. ThatöÏÓăÊÓÆ”app why Turcescu supports the CCC guide.
âThe message they (CCC) are giving is a message of responsible, democratic processes in which churches can play a role,â said Turcescu.
The Development and Peace guide expected by August will concentrate on climate change and CanadaöÏÓăÊÓÆ”app overseas development aid policies. If those issues donât play as well for Conservative candidates as for some others, that doesnât mean Development and Peace is against the right-of-centre government, said Ryan Worms, D&P director of in-Canada programs.
âWe are a democratic movement. We have members across all of Canada and within that membership we have members from the Liberal Party, from the Conservative Party, from the NDP and also from the Bloc Quebecois and probably even members from the Green Party,â he said. âBy no means will we indicate to our members or followers which party to vote for.â
Catholic Charities isnât trying to push people to vote one way or another. Its guide is intended to broaden the political conversation, said Jack Panozzo, Catholic Charities social justice and advocacy director. Among other issues, the Catholic Charities voter guide will highlight housing â an issue that doesnât get much play in official campaigns or media coverage.
âWe need a national housing program,â Panozzo said. âWeâre just trying to flag things people wouldnât think about⊠You can only put it out there.â