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Home Politics

The U.S. bishops’ president race is wide open. Here’s who’s within the running.

INBV News by INBV News
October 5, 2022
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The U.S. bishops’ president race is wide open. Here’s who’s within the running.
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When the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops meets this November to elect a latest president, it can be the primary time in several a long time that the race is wide open, with the present vp unable to run for the highest spot due to his age.

The conference released on Tuesday an inventory of 10 candidates nominated for president and vp:

  • Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, Archdiocese for the Military Services
  • Bishop Michael F. Burbidge, Diocese of Arlington
  • Bishop Frank J. Caggiano, Diocese of Bridgeport
  • Archbishop Paul S. Coakley, Archdiocese of Oklahoma City
  • Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone, Archdiocese of San Francisco
  • Archbishop Paul D. Etienne, Archdiocese of Seattle
  • Bishop Daniel E. Flores, Diocese of Brownsville
  • Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller, Archdiocese of San Antonio
  • Archbishop William E. Lori, Archdiocese of Baltimore
  • Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades, Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend

Whoever is elected president will replace José H. Gomez, the archbishop of Los Angeles, and the brand new vp will take over for Archbishop Allen H. Vigneron of Detroit. Traditionally, though not all the time, the united statesC.C.B. vp is elected president, but Archbishop Vigneron is ineligible to run because he would reach the mandatory retirement age for bishops, 75, during his term. The bishops meet Nov. 14 to Nov. 17 in Baltimore.

When the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops meets this November to elect a latest president, it can be the primary time in several a long time that the race is wide open.

An easy majority of votes is required to be elected president and the remaining nine candidates fill out the slate for vp.

While the collection of a latest president includes any number of things, electing certain leaders may signal the bishops’ priorities for his three-year term.

Not less than three of the candidates for president are familiar names within the U.S. church’s high-profile campaign for religious liberty, which has dominated the conference’s work lately.

While immigration concerns looked as if it would rise to the highest in the course of the Trump administration, bishops have pivoted back to non secular liberty issues, which were also a pressing topic in the course of the Obama presidency. Under the Biden administration, bishops have cited religious liberty in expressing opposition to expanded rights for L.G.B.T. Americans and proposals that would protect legal access to contraception and abortion.

While the collection of a latest president includes any number of things, electing certain leaders may signal the bishops’ priorities for his three-year term.

Baltimore’s Archbishop Lori previously served as the pinnacle of the united statesC.C.B.’s religious freedom ad hoc committee and he’s chaplain to the Knights of Columbus. Two other candidates, Archbishop Coakley of Oklahoma City and Bishop Flores of Brownsville are currently members of the bishops committee for religious liberty.

Other candidates have been vocal of their criticism of Democratic political leaders, which could arrange a clash between the brand new U.S.C.C.B. president and the White House.

San Francisco’s Archbishop Cordileone, who currently heads the bishops committee on laity, marriage, family life and youth, has repeatedly clashed with Catholic politicians, including Speaker Nancy Pelosi. He announced in May that he had barred Ms. Pelosi from receiving Communion in her home archdiocese of San Francisco.

In 2016, Bishop Rhoades, whose diocese encompasses the University of Notre Dame, expressed disappointment that the college selected to honor then-Vice President Joe Biden due to his support for abortion rights and same-sex marriage.

Not less than three of the candidates for president are familiar names within the U.S. church’s high-profile campaign for religious liberty, which has dominated the conference’s work lately.

Each Archbishop Cordileone and Bishop Rhoades are also standing for election to chair the bishops religious liberty committee.

Last 12 months, each Archbishop Cordielone and Bishop Rhoades spoke in favor of drafting a document that would have been used as the idea for denying Communion to Mr. Biden and Ms. Pelosi.

But at the very least one candidate for U.S.C.C.B. president spoke out against that measure.

Seattle’s Archbishop Etienne had urged caution on moving ahead with such an announcement and ultimately voted against the measure, stating the Eucharist was “now enmeshed in a conversation about politics. And that is a really difficult place for us to be.”

The bishops ultimately voted to adopt an announcement on the Eucharist, albeit without explicit language that may advise barring Catholic politicians from receiving Communion.

While perhaps not as well-known outside the confines of church administration, other candidates could bring varied views on contentious issues and deep understanding of how the united statesC.C.B. operates.

Archbishop García-Siller of San Antonio, for instance, has urged lawmakers to enact stricter gun control measures, following mass shootings in El Paso in 2019 and Uvalde in 2022. In 2019, he posted a series of tweets accusing former President Trump of being racist, which he later deleted and apologized for

So far as supporting the priorities set forth by Pope Francis, Bishop Caggiano of Bridgeport has expressed support for the synodal process, a yearslong initiative geared toward capturing the views of the Catholic laity.

Not less than two other candidates have previously held leadership spots for the conference, including the military’s Archbishop Broglio, who most recently served as U.S.C.C.B. secretary and was also chair of the international justice and peace committee. Bishop Burbidge of Arlington was head of the bishops communications committee.

Bishops may even elect the heads of six standing committees.

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