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The CatholicVote.org domain name was first used by the Catholic Alliance in early 2000. [12] The Catholic Alliance was a grassroots group of Americans who agreed with the platform of the fundamental evangelical Protestant Christian Coalition but wished to widen the Coalition's scope to include Catholics. [13]
A Catholic at the top of the ticket, John Kerry, lost the 2004 election to incumbent George W. Bush, a Methodist, who may have [clarification needed] won the majority of Catholic vote. [4] The 2012 election was the first where both major party vice presidential candidates were Catholic, Joe Biden and Paul Ryan.
CatholicVote.org; Center for Christian Virtue; Christian Action Network; Christian Defense League; Christian Voice (United States) Colorado Family Action; Consistent life ethic; Council for National Policy; Council of Fifty
Catholic social teaching; Christian corporatism; Christian ethics; Communitarianism; Conservatism. Liberal; Progressive; Social; Consistent life ethic; Cultural mandate
In the 60s and early 70s, there was a shift as a number of Catholics and Southern whites abandoned their traditional affiliation with the Democratic party and began to support the Republican party. This shift is evidenced by the fact that Nixon received only 33% of the Catholic vote in the 1968 election compared to 52% in 1972.
The Catholic Church and abortion in the United States deals with the views and activities of the Catholic Church in the United States in relation to the abortion debate.The Catholic Church opposes abortion and has campaigned against abortion in the United States, both saying that it is immoral and making statements and taking actions in opposition to its classification as legal.
CatholicVote.org is within the scope of WikiProject Catholicism, an attempt to better organize and improve the quality of information in articles related to the Catholic Church. For more information, visit the project page .
In politics, integralism, integrationism or integrism (French: intégrisme) is an interpretation of Catholic social teaching that argues the principle that the Catholic faith should be the basis of public law and public policy within civil society, wherever the preponderance of Catholics within that society makes this possible.