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{{short description|Abortion rights advocacy group}}
{{pp-semi-vandalism|small=yes|expiry=28 November 2014}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2013}}
{{Infobox organization {{Infobox organization
| name = Catholics for Choice | name = Catholics for Choice
| image = Catholics for Choice logo.jpg | logo = CFC Logo (7).png
| size = 150px | size =
| abbreviation = CFC | abbreviation = CFC
| motto = In Good Conscience | formation = 1973
| formation = 1973 | type =
| purpose = ] advocacy<ref name=Encyclopedia/><ref name=Dillon104>{{Cite book |first=Michele |last=Dillon |title=Catholic identity: balancing reason, faith, and power |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LOevknhl9i8C&pg=PA106 |page=104 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1999|isbn=9780521639590 }}</ref>
| type =
| headquarters = Washington, D.C.
| purpose = ] advocacy<ref name=Encyclopedia/> and activism<ref> , retrieved 2011-08-11 </ref><ref name=Dillon104>{{Cite book |first=Michele |last=Dillon |title=Catholic identity: balancing reason, faith, and power |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=LOevknhl9i8C&pg=PA106 |page=104 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1999}}</ref>
| location =
| headquarters = ]
| location = | leader_title = President
| leader_name = Jamie L. Manson
| leader_title = President
| website =
| leader_name = Jon O'Brien
| website =
}} }}
{{Abortion in the Catholic Church}}
'''Catholics for Choice''' ('''CFC''') is a non-profit organization based in ] that advocates for the ], in dissent with the teachings of the ]. CFC is not affiliated with the Catholic Church.<ref name="Catholic">{{Cite journal |title=Contested Loyalties: Dissident Identity Organizations, Institutions, and Social Movements |journal=Sociological Perspectives |volume=52 |issue=4 |date=Winter 2009 |first=Kelsy |last=Kretschmer |jstor=10.1525/sop.2009.52.4.433 |pages=433–454 |doi=10.1525/sop.2009.52.4.433|s2cid=143359410 }}<br/>{{Cite book |first=Michele |last=Dillon |title=Catholic identity: balancing reason, faith, and power |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1999}}<br/>{{Cite book |title=Law and Religion in Public Life |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QZ98r-7xtZMC&pg=PA66 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |chapter=The future of secularism: a critique |first=Margaret |last=Davies |page=66|isbn=9781136725845 |date=2011-04-27 }}<br/>{{Cite book |title=The Catholic Church and the politics of abortion: a view from the states |year=1992 |publisher=Westview Press |first1=Timothy A. |last1=Byrnes |first2=Mary C. |last2=Segers |page=171}}<br/>{{Cite book |title=Caesar's coin: religion and politics in America |page=155 |first=Richard P. |last=McBrien |publisher=Macmillan |year=1987}}<br/>{{Cite book |first=Michele Antoinette |last=Paludi |title=Feminism and Women's Rights Worldwide |series=Women's Psychology |volume=1 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2010 |isbn=978-0313375965 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DMOD6bRtMl8C&pg=RA2-PA136 |page=136}}<br/>{{Cite news|newspaper=The Washington Times |agency=Reuters |title=Catholics for choice protest in Rome |date=July 12, 1994 |url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=WT&p_theme=wt&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB0F0CEAE20CA33&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM |access-date=June 6, 2012 }}{{subscription required}}<br/>{{Cite news|title=Stupak Like a Fox |url=http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2009/11/18/stupak-like-a-fox.html |work=Newsweek |date=November 18, 2009 }}<br/>{{Cite news|work=Macleans |url=http://www.macleans.ca/2010/04/07/catholic-group-urges-harper-to-include-abortion-in-g8-plan/ |date=April 7, 2010 |title=Catholic group urges Harper to include abortion in G8 plan }}<br/>{{Cite news|url=http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=350153 |publisher=TurkishPress.com |agency=Agence France-Presse |title=Hands off health care, US Catholic group tells bishops |date=March 5, 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141205014502/http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?id=350153 |archive-date=December 5, 2014 |df=mdy }}<br/>{{Cite news|url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2003-11-30-aids-world_x.htm |newspaper=USA Today |agency=Associated Press |title=Events planned for World AIDS Day |date=November 30, 2003 }}<br/>{{Cite news|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1989-11-13-mn-1004-story.html |title=Pro-Choice Advocates Rally Coast-to-Coast |work=Los Angeles Times |date=November 13, 1989 |first1=Karen |last1=Tumulty |first2=Robert J. |last2=Vickers }}<br/>{{Cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=8g0vAAAAIBAJ&pg=936,3848585 |title=U.S. nuns get Vatican ultimatum |date=December 19, 1984 |newspaper=The Montreal Gazette |agency=UPI }}<br/>{{Cite news|work=The Washington Times |date=October 26, 1990 |title=Bishops' role in debate on abortion questioned |url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=WT&p_theme=wt&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_text_search-0=%22Bishops%27%20role%20in%20debate%20on%20abortion%20questioned%22&s_dispstring=Bishops%27%20role%20in%20debate%20on%20abortion%20questioned%20AND%20date%2810/26/1990%20to%2010/26/1990%29&p_field_date-0=YMD_date&p_params_date-0=date:B,E&p_text_date-0=10/26/1990%20to%2010/26/1990%29&xcal_numdocs=50&p_perpage=25&p_sort=YMD_date:D&xcal_useweights=no }}{{subscription required}}<br/>{{Cite news|work=The Pittsburgh Press |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=FQgeAAAAIBAJ&pg=7000,4433963 |title=Abortion up to women, Catholic group contends |first=Jerry |last=Sharpe |date=June 9, 1984 }}</ref> Formed in 1973 as '''Catholics for a Free Choice''', the group gained notice after its ] challenging Church teachings on abortion led to Church disciplinary pressure against some of the priests and nuns who signed it. It has lobbied nationally and internationally for abortion rights goals and led an unsuccessful effort to downgrade the ]'s status in the United Nations. CFC was led for 25 years by ] and is currently led by its President Jamie L. Manson.


A number of Catholic bishops and conferences of bishops have unequivocally rejected and publicly denounced CFC's identification as a Catholic organization.<ref name="Fastiggi2010">{{cite book|author=Robert L. Fastiggi|title=New Catholic Encyclopedia Supplement 2009|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0bhZAAAAYAAJ|access-date=June 11, 2012|year=2010|publisher=Gale/Cengage Learning|isbn=978-1-4144-7527-1 |quote=Catholic bishops and conferences of bishops have consistently repudiated the claim of CFFC to be a Catholic organization.}}</ref> For example, the ] (USCCB) and the ],<ref>{{cite web|title=Comment by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops Regarding a group calling itself 'Catholics for a Free Choice'|url=http://www.cccb.ca/site/eng/media-room/archives/public-statements/2010/2774-comment-by-the-canadian-conference-of-catholic-bishops-regarding-a-group-calling-itself-catholics-for-a-free-choice|publisher=Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops|access-date=August 31, 2011|archive-date=September 28, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928183757/http://www.cccb.ca/site/eng/media-room/archives/public-statements/2010/2774-comment-by-the-canadian-conference-of-catholic-bishops-regarding-a-group-calling-itself-catholics-for-a-free-choice|url-status=dead}}</ref> have stated that CFC is not a Catholic organization and that it promotes positions contrary to Catholic teaching.<ref name=notcatholic> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111113050709/http://old.usccb.org/comm/archives/2000/00-123.shtml |date=November 13, 2011 }}, May 10, 2000.</ref>
'''Catholics for Choice (CFC)''', formerly '''Catholics for a Free Choice (CFFC)''', is a ]<ref>{{Cite news |publisher=Reuters |title=Catholics for choice protest in Rome |date=July 12, 1994 |url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=WT&p_theme=wt&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB0F0CEAE20CA33&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM |accessdate=June 6, 2012}}</ref> ] organization based in ] that was founded "to serve as a voice for Catholics who believe that the Catholic tradition supports a woman's moral and legal right to follow her conscience in matters of sexuality and reproductive health."<ref></ref> The group, founded in 1973, gained some notice and status after a ] challenging Church teaching on abortion led to Church disciplinary pressure against some of the priests and nuns who signed it. It has lobbied nationally and internationally for pro-choice goals and led an unsuccessful effort to downgrade the ]'s status in the ]. CFC was led for 25 years by ] and is currently led by its president, Jon O'Brien.

The ], the ],<ref>{{cite web|title=Comment by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops Regarding a group calling itself ‘Catholics for a Free Choice’|url=http://www.cccb.ca/site/eng/media-room/archives/public-statements/2010/2774-comment-by-the-canadian-conference-of-catholic-bishops-regarding-a-group-calling-itself-catholics-for-a-free-choice|publisher=Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops|accessdate=31 August 2011}}</ref> and the ] have stated that CFC is not a Catholic organization and that it promotes positions contrary to Catholic teaching.<ref name=notcatholic>, May 10, 2000.</ref>


== History == == History ==
CFC was founded in 1973 by Catholics Joan Harriman, Patricia Fogarty McQuillan, and Meta Mulcahy as ''Catholics for a Free Choice'', with the aim of promoting access to abortion in the context of ] tradition.<ref name=Davis/> It emerged from Catholics for the Elimination of All Restrictive Abortion & Contraceptive Laws, a ] lobby group that had been formed in 1970.<ref name="Women and Christianity">{{Cite book |title=Women and Christianity |first=Pamela K. |last=Brubaker |chapter=Gender and Society: Competing Visions of Women's Agency, Equality, and Well-Being |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2010}}</ref> In an early bid for publicity in 1974, on the first anniversary of the ] decision, McQuillan, the group's first president,<ref name="Keller et al"/> had herself crowned pope on the steps of ] in ].<ref name=Davis/> CFC was founded in 1973 by Catholics Joan Harriman, Patricia Fogarty McQuillan, and Meta Mulcahy as Catholics for a Free Choice (CFFC), with the aim of promoting access to abortion in the context of Catholic tradition.<ref name=Davis/> It emerged from Catholics for the Elimination of All Restrictive Abortion & Contraceptive Laws, a New York lobby group that had been formed in 1970.<ref name="Women and Christianity">{{Cite book |title=Women and Christianity |first=Pamela K. |last=Brubaker |chapter=Gender and Society: Competing Visions of Women's Agency, Equality, and Well-Being |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2010}}</ref>


===1970s===
An early member of the board of directors was ], then a ] priest. In August 1974, President Harriman asked O'Rourke to travel with her to ], to baptize a baby whose local priests refused to perform the rite - Catholic canon law forbids priests from baptizing an infant if they are not assured that at least one of the parents will raise the infant with the Catholic faith.<ref name="Sins of the Mother"/><ref>{{cite journal |work=] |title=Correspondence |last=Harriman |first=Joan |volume=101 |number=12 |month=January |year=1975 |url=http://kanda-db1.ggasoftware.com/Summary/Commonweal/V101I12P3-1.htm |quote=I will clarify some facts surrounding the Baptism in Marlboro, Mass. In the name of Catholics for a Free Choice, as president, I called Rev. Joseph O'Rourke who is on our Board of Directors and asked him to baptize the Morrealle baby. I placed the call Aug. 12 and he returned it Aug. 13th. On Aug. 16th I went to Boston for the press conference to announce that Rev. O'Rourke would perform the Baptism. I stated at the press conference that Father Keane was unacceptable to all since he had publicly condemned "Free Choice." CFFC supports "Free Choice" and protects Catholic laypersons and clergy from oppression by the hierarchy. There was a clear-cut issue of reproductive freedom that was made public before Catholics for a Free Choice was ever involved. The date for the baptism was set after the press conference; a prime consideration was that it be a time when relatives and friends of the Morrealle family would be able to attend.}}</ref> The baby's mother, 20-year-old Carol Morreale, had been interviewed regarding an abortion <!-- Time magazine says "abortion clinic" once and "abortion-information clinic" once; the "priests call baptism 'heresy'" story refers to it as "abortion clinic"; so the sources prefer the expression "abortion clinic" --> clinic that was proposed for Marlboro by ], an activist from New York City.<ref name="Sins of the Mother">{{cite web |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,943736,00.html |title=Religion: Sins of the Mother |work=Time |date=September 2, 1974 | |accessdate=August 30, 2011}}</ref> Morreale told a newspaper reporter that she did not advocate abortion herself but that she was in favor of free choice for others and thus she supported Baird's proposal.<ref name="Sins of the Mother"/> Because of her statement in the newspaper, and the town's polarization over the banning of abortion clinics, Morreale's local priest would not baptize her three-month-old son Nathaniel, and ], the ], said that he would not allow any other priest to perform the rite.<ref name="Sins of the Mother"/> On August 20, 1974, O'Rourke publicly baptized the baby on the steps of the Marlboro church, in front of its locked doors and 300 spectators.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.newspaperarchive.com/SiteMap/FreePdfPreview.aspx?img=103501760 |title=Priests Call Baptism 'Heresy' |work=Wisconsin State Journal |date=August 22, 1974 |accessdate=August 30, 2011}}</ref> O'Rourke acted against his superiors' express orders. This was preceded "by a long trail of discontent, often testing the authority of the church", according to the New York Times News Service. O'Rourke was dismissed from the Jesuit Order in September.<ref> ''Sarasota Herald-Tribune'', p. 4b, Oct. 18, 1975</ref><ref> Bottum, Joseph. ''First Things'', Oct. 1, 2006. at highbeam.com. Retrieved 2011-07-14.</ref> He served for a time as CFFC board president.<ref name="Keller et al"/>


An early member of the board of directors was ], then a ] priest. In August 1974, President Harriman asked O'Rourke to travel with her to ], to baptize a baby whose local priests refused to perform the rite Catholic canon law forbids priests from baptizing an infant, if they are not assured that at least one of the parents will raise the infant with the Catholic faith.<ref name="Sins of the Mother"/><ref>{{cite journal|journal=] |title=Correspondence |last=Harriman |first=Joan |volume=101 |number=12 |date=January 1975 |url=http://kanda-db1.ggasoftware.com/Summary/Commonweal/V101I12P3-1.htm |quote=I will clarify some facts surrounding the Baptism in Marlboro, Mass. In the name of Catholics for a Free Choice, as president, I called Rev. Joseph O'Rourke who is on our board of directors and asked him to baptize the Morrealle baby. I placed the call Aug. 12 and he returned it Aug. 13th. On Aug. 16th I went to Boston for the press conference to announce that Rev. O'Rourke would perform the Baptism. I stated at the press conference that Father Keane was unacceptable to all since he had publicly condemned "Free Choice." CFFC supports "Free Choice" and protects Catholic laypersons and clergy from oppression by the hierarchy. There was a clear-cut issue of reproductive freedom that was made public before Catholics for a Free Choice was ever involved. The date for the baptism was set after the press conference; a prime consideration was that it be a time when relatives and friends of the Morrealle family would be able to attend. }}{{dead link|date=November 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> The baby's mother, 20-year-old Carol Morreale, had been interviewed regarding an abortion <!-- Time magazine says "abortion clinic" once and "abortion-information clinic" once; the "priests call baptism 'heresy'" story refers to it as "abortion clinic"; so the sources prefer the expression "abortion clinic" --> clinic that was proposed for Marlboro by ], an activist from New York City.<ref name="Sins of the Mother">{{cite magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,943736,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081222064955/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,943736,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=December 22, 2008 |title=Religion: Sins of the Mother |magazine=Time |date=September 2, 1974 |access-date=August 30, 2011}}</ref> Morreale told a newspaper reporter that she did not advocate abortion herself but that she was in favor of "free choice" for others and thus she supported Baird's proposal.<ref name="Sins of the Mother"/> Because of her statement in the newspaper, and the town's polarization over the banning of abortion clinics, Morreale's local priest would not baptize her three-month-old son Nathaniel, and ], the ], said that he would not allow any other priest to perform the rite.<ref name="Sins of the Mother"/> On August 20, 1974, O'Rourke publicly baptized the baby on the steps of the Marlborough church, in front of its locked doors and 300 spectators.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.newspaperarchive.com/SiteMap/FreePdfPreview.aspx?img=103501760 |title=Priests Call Baptism 'Heresy' |work=Wisconsin State Journal |date=August 22, 1974 |access-date=August 30, 2011}}</ref> O'Rourke acted against his superiors' express orders. This was preceded "by a long trail of discontent, often testing the authority of the church", according to The New York Times News Service. O'Rourke was dismissed from the Jesuit Order in September.<ref> ''Sarasota Herald-Tribune'', p. 4b, October 18, 1975</ref><ref> Bottum, Joseph. ''First Things'', October 1, 2006. at highbeam.com. Retrieved 2011-07-14.{{dead link|date=April 2016}}</ref> He served for a time as CFFC board president.<ref name="Keller et al"/>
In 1979, Patricia McMahon became CFFC president. McMahon shifted CFFC's legal status from a lobby to an educational association, opening up the group to tax-exempt status and to foundation support.<ref name="profiles">{{Cite book |first=Sarah |last=Slavin |title=U.S. women's interest groups: institutional profiles |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=It0XSBZz2wEC&pg=PA98 |pages=98–102 |publisher=Greenwood |year=1995}}</ref> One result of this was a $75,000 grant on behalf of the pro-choice ] which funded the group's first publications, the ''Abortion in Good Faith'' series.<ref name="profiles"/><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://bcrw.barnard.edu/archive/religion/We_Are_the_Mainstream.pdf |page=20 |date=March 1981 |title=We Are the Mainstream: Dissent in the Catholic Church |work=Abortion in Good Faith |publisher=Catholics for a Free Choice |first=Jenefer |last=Ellingston}}</ref>


===1980s===
In 1978 ] joined CFFC. Kissling had operated an abortion clinic and was a founder and director of the ]. In 1980, she became a member of CFFC's Board of Directors and in 1982 was made president, which position she held until her retirement in February 2007.<ref name="dburke2007"> Burke, Daniel. Religion News Service. 2007-02-22. at CFC website. Retrieved 2011-07-14.</ref><ref name=NewYorkTimes /><ref name=Encyclopedia>Djupe, Paul A. and Laura R. Olson, , p. 84, Infobase Publishing 2003</ref> She lobbied politicians and activists, many Catholic, to work in favor of giving women access to contraception and abortion. In 1978, ] joined CFFC. Kissling had operated an abortion clinic and was a founder and director of the ]. In 1980, she became a member of CFFC's board of directors and in 1982 was made president, which position she held until her retirement in February 2007.<ref name="Encyclopedia">Djupe, Paul A. and Laura R. Olson, , p. 84, Infobase Publishing 2003</ref><ref name="dburke2007"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928184044/http://www.catholicsforchoice.org/news/inthenews/After25YearsaCatholicWarriorStepsAside.asp|date=September 28, 2011}} Burke, Daniel. Religion News Service. 2007-02-22. at CFC website. Retrieved 2011-07-14.</ref><ref name="NewYorkTimes"></ref> Kissling lobbied politicians and activists, many Catholic, to work in favor of giving women access to contraception and abortion and pushed the CFFC to lead more political campaigns.


In 1979, Patricia McMahon became CFFC president and shifted CFFC's legal status from a lobby to an educational association, opening up the group to tax-exempt status and to foundation support.<ref name="profiles">{{Cite book |first=Sarah |last=Slavin |title=U.S. women's interest groups: institutional profiles |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=It0XSBZz2wEC&pg=PA98 |pages=98–102 |publisher=Greenwood |year=1995|isbn=9780313250736 }}</ref> One result of this was a $75,000 grant on behalf of the pro-abortion rights ], which funded the group's first publications, the ''Abortion in Good Faith'' series.<ref name="profiles" /><ref>{{cite web |url=http://bcrw.barnard.edu/archive/religion/We_Are_the_Mainstream.pdf |page=20 |date=March 1981 |title=We Are the Mainstream: Dissent in the Catholic Church |work=Abortion in Good Faith |publisher=Catholics for a Free Choice |first=Jenefer |last=Ellingston}}</ref>
In 1992, CFC was classified as a ] by the ] (U.N.); CFC subsequently participated in some U.N. conferences.<ref name=Encyclopedia/> With other groups, the CFC successfully lobbied against the naming of John M. Klink, a former representative of the ] at the U.N., to lead the State Department ] in 2001. More recently, it has assisted in drafting legislation with the stated goal of reducing abortions, partly by increasing financing for family planning.<ref name=NewYorkTimes/>


===''The New York Times'' ad===
In April 1995, the '']'' published a letter by Marjorie Rieley Maguire, a theology professor, former CFC activist and co-author of CFC's 1984 '']'' advertisement, "]". In her letter, Maguire described CFC as "an anti-woman organization" devoted to "the promotion of abortion, the defense of every abortion decision as a good, moral choice and the related agenda of persuading society to cast off any moral constraints about sexual behavior." Maguire also charged that when she was involved with CFC, she "was never aware that any of its leaders attended Mass" and that "various conversations and experiences convinced they did not."<ref>, '']'', Jan. 15, 2008</ref>

In 2007, CFC's former Vice-President and Director of Communications Jon O'Brien was appointed President.

===New York Times ad===
{{Main|A Catholic Statement on Pluralism and Abortion}} {{Main|A Catholic Statement on Pluralism and Abortion}}
In 1982, CFC sponsored a briefing of Catholic members of Congress, highlighting that the majority of American Catholics disagreed with the Catholic Church's position on the topic of abortion.<ref name="Keller et al"/> Congresswoman ] wrote an introduction to the briefing, and endorsements were also received from Congressmen ] and ]. Ferraro wrote that responses varied to the problem of abortion, and that "the Catholic position on abortion is not monolithic...."<ref name="Keller et al">{{cite book|first=Frances |last=Kissling |author-link=Frances Kissling |editor=Rosemary Skinner Keller |editor-link=Rosemary Skinner Keller |editor2=Rosemary Radford Ruether |editor2-link=Rosemary Radford Ruether |chapter=Women's Freedom and Reproductive Rights: The Core Fear of Patriarchy |title=Encyclopedia of women and religion in North America |volume=3|publisher=Indiana University Press |year=2006 |isbn=0-253-34688-6 |pages=1104–1106}}</ref>


During the ], Ferraro was chosen as the vice-presidential running mate of ]. Cardinal ], ], sharply criticized Ferraro's pro-abortion rights position, and in October 1984 Kissling responded to O'Connor by placing an advertisement signed by 97 Catholics, including theologians, lay persons, priests and nuns, in '']''.<ref name=Encyclopedia/><ref name="Keller et al"/> The advertisement, "]," stated that "direct abortion ... can sometimes be a moral choice" and that "responsible moral decisions can only be made in an atmosphere of freedom from fear of coercion."<ref name=Dillon/>
In 1982, CFC sponsored a briefing of Catholic members of Congress, highlighting the majority of American Catholic opinion that dissented with the ] on the topic of abortion.<ref name="Keller et al"/> Congresswoman ] wrote an introduction to the briefing, and endorsements were also received from Congressmen ] and ]. Ferraro wrote that responses varied to the problem of abortion, and that "the Catholic position on abortion is not monolithic..."<ref name="Keller et al">{{cite book |first=Frances |last=Kissling |authorlink=Frances Kissling |editors=] and ] |chapter=Women's Freedom and Reproductive Rights: The Core Fear of Patriarchy |title=Encyclopedia of women and religion in North America |volume=3 |publisher=Indiana University Press |year=2006 |isbn=0-253-34688-6 |pages=1104–1106}}</ref>


The Catholic Church took disciplinary measures against some of the nuns who signed the statement, sparking controversy among American Catholics, and intra-Catholic conflict on the abortion issue remained news for at least two years.<ref name=Dillon>{{Cite book |first=Michele |last=Dillon |title=Catholic identity: balancing reason, faith, and power |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LOevknhl9i8C&pg=PA106 |page=106|publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1999|isbn=9780521639590 }}</ref> This ad, however, strengthened the recognition and credibility of the CFC within the Catholic community and American politics.<ref name=Davis>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kAJN-OcsZhAC&pg=PA146 |pages=146–147 |title=Sacred work: Planned Parenthood and its clergy alliances |last=Davis |first=Tom |publisher=Rutgers University Press |year=2005|isbn=0-8135-3493-3}}</ref><ref name="Keller et al"/><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mwvqvYv7N5kC&pg=PA96 |page=96 |last=Weaver |first=Mary Jo|title=What's left?: liberal American Catholics |publisher=Indiana University Press |year=1999|isbn=0-253-21332-0}}</ref>
During the ], Ferraro was chosen as the vice-presidential running mate of ]. Cardinal ], ], sharply criticized Ferraro's pro-choice position, and in October 1984 Kissling responded to O'Connor by placing an advertisement signed by 97 prominent Catholics, including leading theologians, lay persons, priests and nuns, in '']''.<ref name=Encyclopedia/><ref name="Keller et al"/> The advertisement, entitled "]", stated that "direct abortion&nbsp;...can sometimes be a moral choice" and that "responsible moral decisions can only be made in an atmosphere of freedom from fear of coercion."<ref name=Dillon/>


===1990s===
The ad directly challenged Church authority. The Catholic Church took disciplinary measures against some of the nuns who signed the statement, sparking controversy among American Catholics, and intra-Catholic conflict on the abortion issue remained news for at least two years.<ref name=Dillon>{{Cite book |first=Michele |last=Dillon |title=Catholic identity: balancing reason, faith, and power |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=LOevknhl9i8C&pg=PA106 |page=106 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1999}}</ref> In the end, CFC was seen to gain credibility and status by the advertisement, while the Church hierarchy was unable to advance their political goals on the topic of abortion.<ref name="Keller et al"/><ref>{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=mwvqvYv7N5kC&pg=PA96 |page=96 |last=Weaver |first=Mary Jo |title=What's left?: liberal American Catholics |publisher=Indiana University Press |year=1999 |isbn=0-253-21332-0}}</ref><ref name=Davis>{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=kAJN-OcsZhAC&pg=PA146 |pages=146–147 |title=Sacred work: Planned Parenthood and its clergy alliances |last=Davis |first=Tom |publisher=Rutgers University Press |year=2005 |isbn=0-8135-3493-3}}</ref>
In 1992, CFC was classified as a non-governmental organization by the United Nations (U.N.); CFC subsequently participated in some U.N. conferences.<ref name=Encyclopedia/> With other groups, the CFC successfully lobbied against the naming of John M. Klink, a former representative of the ] at the U.N., to lead the State Department ] in 2001. More recently, it has assisted in drafting legislation with the stated goal of reducing abortions, partly by increasing financing for family planning.<ref name=NewYorkTimes/>


In April 1995, the '']'' published a letter by Marjorie Rieley Maguire, a theology professor, former CFC activist and co-author of CFC's 1984 '']'' advertisement, "]". In her letter, Maguire described CFC as "an anti-woman organization" devoted to "the promotion of abortion, the defense of every abortion decision as a good, moral choice and the related agenda of persuading society to cast off any moral constraints about sexual behavior." Maguire also charged that when she was involved with CFC, she "was never aware that any of its leaders attended Mass" and that "various conversations and experiences convinced they did not."<ref>, '']'', January 15, 2008</ref>
===See Change campaign===
In March 1999,<ref name="AFP">{{Cite news |publisher=Agence France-Presse |title=US-based Catholic group, feminists oppose Vatican position at UN |date=March 15, 2000}}</ref> CFC commenced an unsuccessful<ref name="dburke2007"/> international<ref name=interpress/> campaign, called "See Change", which aimed to downgrade the status of the ] in the United Nations<ref name=religion_news_service>{{Cite news |title=Pro-Choice Catholic Group Challenges Vatican at U.N. |publisher=Religion News Service |date=June 2000 |first=Kevin |last=Eckstrom}}</ref> from ] to ] status, which would mean that the Holy See could not vote on U.N. policy and must be invited if it wished to address a meeting.<ref name=ottawacitizen>{{Cite news |work=Ottawa Citizen |title=Canadians join move to oust Vatican from UN International coalition |first=Christopher |last=Shulgan |date=April 19, 1999}}</ref> The campaign drew support from 541<ref>{{Cite news |work=The Nation |first=Katha |last=Pollitt |date=June 26, 2000 |title=Women: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back?}}</ref> groups, including women's, family-planning and abortion groups, such as ] and ].<ref name=religion_news_service/><ref>{{Cite news |title=Catholics bid to strip Vatican of statehood |first=Rupert |last=Cornwell |date=August 29, 1999 |work=The Independent on Sunday}}</ref> See Change's website says, "We believe that the Holy See, the government of the Roman Catholic church, should participate in the UN in the same way as the world's other religions do—as a non-governmental organization....While the Holy See has the right to a voice at the United Nations, that voice should only be as loud as those of the world's other religions. NGO status would allow the Holy See to continue to advocate for its positions, but without the benefit of a special platform for its views."<ref name="seechange">, retrieved 2011-08-11 </ref>


===2000s===
The campaign was begun after Vatican representatives at various UN conferences blocked consensus on certain topics related to sexual and reproductive health, such as condom distribution and safe sex education in AIDS prevention programs and family planning, birth control, and abortion.<ref name=interpress>{{Cite news |title=NGOs Call For Review of U.N. Status of Holy See |publisher=Inter Press Service |first=Mithre J. |last=Sandrasagra |date=March 14, 2000}}</ref><ref name="IrishTimes">{{Cite news |work=Irish Times |date=March 25, 1999 |title=Campaign to challenge Vatican's status at UN |first=Patsy |last=McGarry}}</ref><ref name="AFP"/><ref name=religion_news_service/> Kissling, then CFC's president, asked: "Why should an entity that is in essence 100 square acres of office space and tourist attractions in the middle of Rome with a citizenry that excludes women and children have a place at the table where governments set policies affecting the very survival of women and children?" <ref name="IrishTimes" />
In March 1999,<ref name="AFP">{{Cite news |publisher=Agence France-Presse |title=US-based Catholic group, feminists oppose Vatican position at UN |date=March 15, 2000 |url=http://www.seechange.org/media/AFP,%20March%2015,%202000.htm}}</ref> CFC launched a unsuccessful campaign to downgrade the status of the ] in the United Nations to that of an ] from that of a ].<ref name="dburke2007"/><ref name=interpress/><ref name=religion_news_service>{{Cite news |title=Pro-Choice Catholic Group Challenges Vatican at U.N. |publisher=Religion News Service |date=June 2000 |first=Kevin |last=Eckstrom}}</ref> Had the campaign, branded as "See Change", been successful, the Vatican would no longer have had a vote on UN policy nor speaking rights.<ref name=ottawacitizen>{{Cite news |work=Ottawa Citizen |title=Canadians join move to oust Vatican from UN International coalition |first=Christopher |last=Shulgan |date=April 19, 1999 |url=http://www.seechange.org/media/citizen%204%2019%2099.htm}}</ref> The campaign drew support from 541<ref>{{Cite news |work=The Nation |first=Katha |last=Pollitt |date=June 26, 2000 |title=Women: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back?}}</ref> groups, including women's, family-planning and abortion groups, such as ] and ].<ref name=religion_news_service/><ref>{{Cite news |title=Catholics bid to strip Vatican of statehood |first=Rupert |last=Cornwell |date=August 29, 1999 |work=The Independent on Sunday |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/catholics-bid-to-strip-vatican-of-statehood-1118215.html}}</ref>


The campaign was begun after Vatican representatives at various UN conferences blocked consensus on certain topics related to sexual and reproductive health, such as condom distribution and safe sex education in AIDS prevention programs and family planning, birth control, and abortion.<ref name="AFP"/><ref name=interpress>{{Cite news |title=NGOs Call For Review of U.N. Status of Holy See |publisher=Inter Press Service |first=Mithre J. |last=Sandrasagra |date=March 14, 2000 |url=http://www.ipsnews.net/2000/03/politics-ngos-call-for-review-of-un-status-of-holy-see/}}</ref><ref name=religion_news_service/><ref name="IrishTimes">{{Cite news |work=Irish Times |date=March 25, 1999 |title=Campaign to challenge Vatican's status at UN |first=Patsy |last=McGarry |url=http://www.irishtimes.com/news/campaign-to-challenge-vatican-s-status-at-un-1.166496}}</ref> Kissling, then CFC's president, asked: "Why should an entity that is in essence 100 square acres of office space and tourist attractions in the middle of Rome with a citizenry that excludes women and children have a place at the table where governments set policies affecting the very survival of women and children?"<ref name="IrishTimes" />
The campaign was supported by European Parliament politicians from three Dutch parties.<ref>{{Cite news |url=http://www.seechange.org/media/Trouw.htm |work=Trouw |title=Doorbreek machtspositie Vaticaan |date=November 18, 2000 |first=Lousewies |last=van der Laan |authorlink=Lousewies van der Laan |first2=Elly |last2=Plooij-van Gorsel |first3=Joke |last3=Swiebel |authorlink2=Elly Plooij-van Gorsel}}</ref> It was also supported by ], historic leader of the ].<ref>{{Cite news |title=Italian maverick politician urges abolition of Vatican state |publisher=Agence France-Presse |date=November 27, 2000}}</ref>


The campaign was supported by ] politicians from three Dutch parties.<ref>{{Cite news |url=http://www.seechange.org/media/Trouw.htm |work=Trouw |title=Doorbreek machtspositie Vaticaan |date=November 18, 2000 |first1=Lousewies |last1=van der Laan |author-link=Lousewies van der Laan |first2=Elly |last2=Plooij-van Gorsel |first3=Joke |last3=Swiebel |authorlink2=Elly Plooij-van Gorsel}}</ref> It was also supported by ], a founder of the ].<ref>{{Cite news |title=Italian maverick politician urges abolition of Vatican state |publisher=Agence France-Presse |date=November 27, 2000 |url=http://www.seechange.org/media/AFP,%20Italian%20MP.htm}}</ref>
The campaign faced difficulty in the UN from the start and, according to U.N. spokesperson Farhan Haq in 1999, seemed "unlikely" to succeed.<ref name=interpress/><ref name=religion_news_service/> ] Bishop John Baycroft said "The ] has as much right to be as any of the other countries", as the modern remnant of the ]. ] professor ] wrote that the See Change campaign is anti-Catholic, and that the major diplomatic and mediation activity of the Vatican makes it deserve recognition far more than many other UN members.<ref name=new_anti-catholicism/>


The campaign faced difficulty in the UN from the start and, according to U.N. spokesperson Farhan Haq in 1999, seemed "unlikely" to succeed.<ref name=interpress/><ref name=religion_news_service/> ] Bishop ] said "The ] has as much right to be as any of the other countries", as the modern remnant of the ]. ] professor ] wrote that the See Change campaign is ], and that the major ] makes it deserve recognition far more than many other UN members.<ref name="new_anti-catholicism">Jenkins, Philip, , pgs. 84–87, Oxford University Press US 2003</ref>
== Mission ==
CFC describes its mission as "to shape and advance sexual and reproductive ethics that are based on justice, reflect a commitment to women's well-being and respect and affirm the capacity of women and men to make moral decisions about their lives. CFC works in the United States and internationally to ensure that all people have access to safe and affordable reproductive health-care services and to infuse our core values into public policy, community life and Catholic social teaching and thinking."<ref name="ourwork"></ref>


In 2007, CFC's former Vice-President and Director of Communications, Jon O'Brien, was appointed President.{{Citation needed|date=September 2021}} In 2019, CFC's former Vice-President and Domestic Program Director, Sara Hutchinson Ratcliffe, was named Acting President.{{Citation needed|date=September 2021}} In October 2020, '']'' columnist Jamie L. Manson took over as president of the organization, leaving her position at ''NCR''.<ref>{{Cite web|last1=October 15|last2=Religion|first2=2020 {{!}} Angela Bonavoglia {{!}}|title=Pro-Choice Religious Community Making Their Voices Heard - Women's Media Center|url=https://womensmediacenter.com/news-features/pro-choice-religious-community-making-their-voices-heard|access-date=2020-12-17|website=womensmediacenter.com|language=en}}</ref>
CFC writes that they "are part of the great majority who believes that Catholic teachings on conscience mean that every individual must follow his or her own conscience – and respect others' right to do the same."<ref name="ourwork"/>


==Operations and funding== ==Operations and funding==
CFC is not a ] but an ]. It relies upon paid employees and committed volunteer activists that it selectively recruits in various regions.<ref name= Dillon/>


In 2007, CFC had a budget of $3&nbsp;million, increased from $2.5&nbsp;million annually in the years leading up to 2003.<ref name=Encyclopedia/> It has been supported largely by secular foundations such as the ], ], ], and the ].<ref name=Encyclopedia/><ref name="NewYorkTimes"/><ref>Hunter, James Davison, , p. 74, Simon and Schuster, 1994</ref>
CFC is not a ] but an ]. It relies upon paid employees and committed volunteer activists that it selectively recruits in various regions.<ref name= Dillon/>

In 2007, CFC had a budget of $3&nbsp;million, increased from $2.5&nbsp;million annually in the years leading up to 2003.<ref name=Encyclopedia/> It is supported largely by secular foundations such as the ], ], ], ], and the ].<ref name=Encyclopedia/><ref name="NewYorkTimes"/><ref>Hunter, James Davison, , p. 744, Simon and Schuster, 1994</ref>


==Criticism== ==Criticism==
Criticism of CFC has largely come from authorities in the Catholic Church who disagree with the mission and purpose of the organization. Critics believe CFC undermines the Church’s authority through identifying as a Catholic organization while opposing the Church’s official stance on abortion.<ref name="Dillon" />  They claim that CFC is not authentically Catholic, but rather a puppet of secular abortion rights organizations and a front for ].<ref name="Encyclopedia" /><ref name="NewYorkTimes" />


The ] (USCCB) opposes CFC and has stated that it "is not a Catholic organization, does not speak for the Catholic Church, and in fact promotes positions contrary to the teaching of the Church as articulated by the Holy See and the NCCB."<ref name="Dillon" /> This conflict came to a head in 1996 when members of CFC in the ], Nebraska were threatened with ] if they did not leave the organization.<ref> at ewtn.com. March 19, 1996. Retrieved 2011-07-20.</ref> Kissling responded by saying that people in favor of abortion rights who consider themselves to be "Catholics in good faith" should just "go about their lives as Catholics."<ref>{{Cite news |work=All Things Considered |publisher=National Public Radio |date=March 25, 1996 |title=Nebraska Bishop Excommunicates Catholic Reformers |url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-28474856.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160529073110/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-28474856.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=May 29, 2016}}{{subscription required}}</ref>
CFC and the Church hierarchy are moral and political opponents. For Church officials, CFC's potential to cause harm to their aims is intensified because CFC's positions are taken in the name of Catholics, publicly undermining the authority of the Church.<ref name=Dillon/> Critics say that CFC speaks for bigger, secular pro-choice organizations and also that it is a facade for ].<ref name=NewYorkTimes /> The ] (USCCB) has repeatedly rejected CFC's claim to Catholic identity and characterized it as "an arm of the abortion lobby."<ref name=Encyclopedia/> In 1993, the bishops said that CFC is not an "authentic" Catholic organization and charged that it had "rejected unity with the church on important issues of long-standing and unchanging church teaching."<ref name=Dillon/> In 2000, the USCCB reiterated that CFC "is not a Catholic organization, does not speak for the Catholic Church, and in fact promotes positions contrary to the teaching of the Church as articulated by the Holy See and the NCCB," and that "its activity is directed to rejection and distortion of Catholic teaching about the respect and protection due to defenseless unborn human life."<ref name=notcatholic>, May 10, 2000.</ref> It also stated that "The public relations effort has ridiculed the Holy See in language reminiscent of other episodes of anti-Catholic bigotry that the Catholic Church has endured in the past."<ref name=notcatholic/> The ] has twice (in 2002 and 2010) reiterated that Catholics for a Free Choice: "1) is not Catholic and 2) does not represent the teachings or views of the Catholic Church."<ref>, April 16, 2010.</ref> In 2003, the official newspaper of the ] rejected any connection with Catholics for a Free Choice and clarified that the group is not part of the Catholic Church because of its support for the legalization of abortion, among other things.<ref>, ], Nov. 27, 2003.</ref>


Helen M. Alvaré, an associate professor of law at the ], said that CFC has "no grass-roots base among Catholics."<ref name=NewYorkTimes/> She said the CFC arguments were not different from other pro-choice groups.<ref name=NewYorkTimes></ref> ] professor ] wrote that CFFC is a public voice for anti-Catholic opinions. He wrote that in 1991 Frances Kissling said "I spent twenty years looking for a government that I could overthrow without being thrown in jail. I finally found one in the Catholic church. Jenkins also writes that Kissling engages in "solid seventeenth-century anti-popery". <ref name=new_anti-catholicism> Jenkins, Philip, , pgs. 84-87, Oxford University Press US 2003</ref> Helen M. Alvaré, an associate professor of law at the ], has asserted that CFC has "no grass-roots base among Catholics."<ref name=NewYorkTimes/> She said the CFC arguments were not different from other pro-abortion rights groups.<ref name=NewYorkTimes></ref> ] professor and historian of religion ] wrote that CFC is a public voice for anti-Catholic opinions. He wrote that in 1991 Frances Kissling stated, "I spent twenty years looking for a government that I could overthrow without being thrown in jail. I finally found one in the Catholic church." Jenkins also writes that Kissling engages in "solid seventeenth-century anti-popery".<ref name=new_anti-catholicism>Jenkins, Philip, , pgs. 84–87, Oxford University Press US 2003</ref>


=== Excommunication ===
In response to accusations of anti-Catholicism, theologian, ] and CFC board member ] wrote that CFC was part of a ] rather than a proponent of anti-Catholic bigotry, that the accusation was an attempt to portray the "Catholic right" as the only authentic Catholics, and that "the charge of 'anti-Catholicism' is being used as a scare tactic by the Catholic right in the service of repression of progressive Catholic views."<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.catholicsforchoice.org/conscience/archives/c2000autumn_mantraofanticatholicism.asp |title=The Mantra of Anti-Catholicism |work=Conscience: The Newsjournal of Catholic Opinion |date=Autumn 2000 |first=Rosemary Radford |last=Ruether}}</ref>
Bishop ] of ], issued an ] in March 1996 forbidding Catholics within his diocese from membership in 12 organizations including CFC. Bruskewitz stated that membership in any of these 12 groups "is always perilous to the Catholic Faith and most often is totally incompatible with the Catholic Faith." Members of the Diocese were given one month from the date of the interdict to remove themselves from participation in the named organizations or face ] ].<ref> at ewtn.com. March 19, 1996. Retrieved 2011-07-20.</ref> Bruskewitz noted that heeding the ], would "be left to the person's conscience."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/CATHOLICS+IN+12+GROUPS+EXCOMMUNICATED+IN+NEBRASKA.-a083932238 |title=Catholics in 12 Groups Excommunicated in Nebraska |date=May 16, 1996 |agency=Associated Press |work=Daily News |location=Los Angeles, California |publisher=The Free Library, by Farlex |access-date=July 18, 2011}}</ref> Frances Kissling, then CFC president, said, "What we would advise people in that diocese to say is that, 'We consider ourselves to be Catholics in good faith, and we think you have rendered the wrong opinion, and to go about their lives as Catholics."<ref>{{Cite news |work=All Things Considered |publisher=National Public Radio |date=March 25, 1996 |title=Nebraska Bishop Excommunicates Catholic Reformers |url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-28474856.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160529073110/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-28474856.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=May 29, 2016}}{{subscription required}}</ref>


== Excommunication == ==See also==
*]
Bishop ] of ], ] ] ], with effect from April 15, 1996, against Catholics in his diocese who held membership in any of 12 organizations, including CFC, stating that such membership "is always perilous to the Catholic Faith and most often is totally incompatible with the Catholic Faith". Against those who remained members for more than a month he legislated automatic ].<ref> at ewtn.com. March 19, 1996. Retrieved 2011-07-20.</ref> Bruskewitz noted that heeding the ], would "be left to the person's conscience."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/CATHOLICS+IN+12+GROUPS+EXCOMMUNICATED+IN+NEBRASKA.-a083932238 |title=Catholics in 12 Groups Excommunicated in Nebraska |date=May 16, 1996 |agency=Associated Press |work=Daily News |location=Los Angeles, California |publisher=The Free Library, by Farlex |accessdate=July 18, 2011}}</ref> Frances Kissling, then CFC president, said, "What we would advise people in that diocese to say is that, 'We consider ourselves to be Catholics in good faith, and we think you have rendered the wrong opinion,' and to go about their lives as Catholics."<ref>{{Cite news |work=All Things Considered |publisher=National Public Radio |date=March 25, 1996 |title=Nebraska Bishop Excommunicates Catholic Reformers}}</ref>
*]
*]
*]


== References == == References ==
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== External links == == External links ==
* Official website * Official website
* Magazine * Magazine
*, at the ], Smith College Special Collections

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Latest revision as of 02:01, 5 December 2024

Abortion rights advocacy group

Catholics for Choice
AbbreviationCFC
Formation1973
PurposeAbortion rights advocacy
HeadquartersWashington, D.C.
PresidentJamie L. Manson
Websitecatholicsforchoice.org
Part of a series of articles on
Abortion
and the Catholic Church
Official opposition
Philosophy and theology
History
Activism
Dissidence
See also
icon Catholic Church portal

Catholics for Choice (CFC) is a non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C. that advocates for the legalization of abortion, in dissent with the teachings of the Catholic Church. CFC is not affiliated with the Catholic Church. Formed in 1973 as Catholics for a Free Choice, the group gained notice after its 1984 advertisement in The New York Times challenging Church teachings on abortion led to Church disciplinary pressure against some of the priests and nuns who signed it. It has lobbied nationally and internationally for abortion rights goals and led an unsuccessful effort to downgrade the Holy See's status in the United Nations. CFC was led for 25 years by Frances Kissling and is currently led by its President Jamie L. Manson.

A number of Catholic bishops and conferences of bishops have unequivocally rejected and publicly denounced CFC's identification as a Catholic organization. For example, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) and the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, have stated that CFC is not a Catholic organization and that it promotes positions contrary to Catholic teaching.

History

CFC was founded in 1973 by Catholics Joan Harriman, Patricia Fogarty McQuillan, and Meta Mulcahy as Catholics for a Free Choice (CFFC), with the aim of promoting access to abortion in the context of Catholic tradition. It emerged from Catholics for the Elimination of All Restrictive Abortion & Contraceptive Laws, a New York lobby group that had been formed in 1970.

1970s

An early member of the board of directors was Joseph O'Rourke, then a Jesuit priest. In August 1974, President Harriman asked O'Rourke to travel with her to Marlborough, Massachusetts, to baptize a baby whose local priests refused to perform the rite – Catholic canon law forbids priests from baptizing an infant, if they are not assured that at least one of the parents will raise the infant with the Catholic faith. The baby's mother, 20-year-old Carol Morreale, had been interviewed regarding an abortion clinic that was proposed for Marlboro by Bill Baird, an activist from New York City. Morreale told a newspaper reporter that she did not advocate abortion herself but that she was in favor of "free choice" for others and thus she supported Baird's proposal. Because of her statement in the newspaper, and the town's polarization over the banning of abortion clinics, Morreale's local priest would not baptize her three-month-old son Nathaniel, and Humberto Sousa Medeiros, the Archbishop of Boston, said that he would not allow any other priest to perform the rite. On August 20, 1974, O'Rourke publicly baptized the baby on the steps of the Marlborough church, in front of its locked doors and 300 spectators. O'Rourke acted against his superiors' express orders. This was preceded "by a long trail of discontent, often testing the authority of the church", according to The New York Times News Service. O'Rourke was dismissed from the Jesuit Order in September. He served for a time as CFFC board president.

1980s

In 1978, Frances Kissling joined CFFC. Kissling had operated an abortion clinic and was a founder and director of the National Abortion Federation. In 1980, she became a member of CFFC's board of directors and in 1982 was made president, which position she held until her retirement in February 2007. Kissling lobbied politicians and activists, many Catholic, to work in favor of giving women access to contraception and abortion and pushed the CFFC to lead more political campaigns.

In 1979, Patricia McMahon became CFFC president and shifted CFFC's legal status from a lobby to an educational association, opening up the group to tax-exempt status and to foundation support. One result of this was a $75,000 grant on behalf of the pro-abortion rights Sunnen Foundation, which funded the group's first publications, the Abortion in Good Faith series.

The New York Times ad

Main article: A Catholic Statement on Pluralism and Abortion

In 1982, CFC sponsored a briefing of Catholic members of Congress, highlighting that the majority of American Catholics disagreed with the Catholic Church's position on the topic of abortion. Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro wrote an introduction to the briefing, and endorsements were also received from Congressmen Tom Daschle and Leon Panetta. Ferraro wrote that responses varied to the problem of abortion, and that "the Catholic position on abortion is not monolithic...."

During the 1984 presidential campaign, Ferraro was chosen as the vice-presidential running mate of Walter Mondale. Cardinal John Joseph O'Connor, Archbishop of New York, sharply criticized Ferraro's pro-abortion rights position, and in October 1984 Kissling responded to O'Connor by placing an advertisement signed by 97 Catholics, including theologians, lay persons, priests and nuns, in The New York Times. The advertisement, "A Catholic Statement on Pluralism and Abortion," stated that "direct abortion ... can sometimes be a moral choice" and that "responsible moral decisions can only be made in an atmosphere of freedom from fear of coercion."

The Catholic Church took disciplinary measures against some of the nuns who signed the statement, sparking controversy among American Catholics, and intra-Catholic conflict on the abortion issue remained news for at least two years. This ad, however, strengthened the recognition and credibility of the CFC within the Catholic community and American politics.

1990s

In 1992, CFC was classified as a non-governmental organization by the United Nations (U.N.); CFC subsequently participated in some U.N. conferences. With other groups, the CFC successfully lobbied against the naming of John M. Klink, a former representative of the Holy See at the U.N., to lead the State Department Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration in 2001. More recently, it has assisted in drafting legislation with the stated goal of reducing abortions, partly by increasing financing for family planning.

In April 1995, the National Catholic Reporter published a letter by Marjorie Rieley Maguire, a theology professor, former CFC activist and co-author of CFC's 1984 The New York Times advertisement, "A Catholic Statement on Pluralism and Abortion". In her letter, Maguire described CFC as "an anti-woman organization" devoted to "the promotion of abortion, the defense of every abortion decision as a good, moral choice and the related agenda of persuading society to cast off any moral constraints about sexual behavior." Maguire also charged that when she was involved with CFC, she "was never aware that any of its leaders attended Mass" and that "various conversations and experiences convinced they did not."

2000s

In March 1999, CFC launched a unsuccessful campaign to downgrade the status of the Holy See in the United Nations to that of an NGO from that of a non-member state. Had the campaign, branded as "See Change", been successful, the Vatican would no longer have had a vote on UN policy nor speaking rights. The campaign drew support from 541 groups, including women's, family-planning and abortion groups, such as NARAL Pro-Choice America and Planned Parenthood.

The campaign was begun after Vatican representatives at various UN conferences blocked consensus on certain topics related to sexual and reproductive health, such as condom distribution and safe sex education in AIDS prevention programs and family planning, birth control, and abortion. Kissling, then CFC's president, asked: "Why should an entity that is in essence 100 square acres of office space and tourist attractions in the middle of Rome with a citizenry that excludes women and children have a place at the table where governments set policies affecting the very survival of women and children?"

The campaign was supported by European Parliament politicians from three Dutch parties. It was also supported by Marco Pannella, a founder of the Italian Radicals.

The campaign faced difficulty in the UN from the start and, according to U.N. spokesperson Farhan Haq in 1999, seemed "unlikely" to succeed. Anglican Bishop John Baycroft said "The Vatican has as much right to be as any of the other countries", as the modern remnant of the Papal States. Pennsylvania State University professor Philip Jenkins wrote that the See Change campaign is anti-Catholic, and that the major diplomatic and mediation activity of the Vatican makes it deserve recognition far more than many other UN members.

In 2007, CFC's former Vice-President and Director of Communications, Jon O'Brien, was appointed President. In 2019, CFC's former Vice-President and Domestic Program Director, Sara Hutchinson Ratcliffe, was named Acting President. In October 2020, National Catholic Reporter columnist Jamie L. Manson took over as president of the organization, leaving her position at NCR.

Operations and funding

CFC is not a membership organization but an advocacy group. It relies upon paid employees and committed volunteer activists that it selectively recruits in various regions.

In 2007, CFC had a budget of $3 million, increased from $2.5 million annually in the years leading up to 2003. It has been supported largely by secular foundations such as the Ford Foundation, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation, and the Playboy Foundation.

Criticism

Criticism of CFC has largely come from authorities in the Catholic Church who disagree with the mission and purpose of the organization. Critics believe CFC undermines the Church’s authority through identifying as a Catholic organization while opposing the Church’s official stance on abortion.  They claim that CFC is not authentically Catholic, but rather a puppet of secular abortion rights organizations and a front for anti-Catholicism.

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) opposes CFC and has stated that it "is not a Catholic organization, does not speak for the Catholic Church, and in fact promotes positions contrary to the teaching of the Church as articulated by the Holy See and the NCCB." This conflict came to a head in 1996 when members of CFC in the Diocese of Lincoln, Nebraska were threatened with excommunication if they did not leave the organization. Kissling responded by saying that people in favor of abortion rights who consider themselves to be "Catholics in good faith" should just "go about their lives as Catholics."

Helen M. Alvaré, an associate professor of law at the Catholic University of America, has asserted that CFC has "no grass-roots base among Catholics." She said the CFC arguments were not different from other pro-abortion rights groups. Pennsylvania State University professor and historian of religion Philip Jenkins wrote that CFC is a public voice for anti-Catholic opinions. He wrote that in 1991 Frances Kissling stated, "I spent twenty years looking for a government that I could overthrow without being thrown in jail. I finally found one in the Catholic church." Jenkins also writes that Kissling engages in "solid seventeenth-century anti-popery".

Excommunication

Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz of Lincoln, Nebraska, issued an interdict in March 1996 forbidding Catholics within his diocese from membership in 12 organizations including CFC. Bruskewitz stated that membership in any of these 12 groups "is always perilous to the Catholic Faith and most often is totally incompatible with the Catholic Faith." Members of the Diocese were given one month from the date of the interdict to remove themselves from participation in the named organizations or face automatic excommunication. Bruskewitz noted that heeding the ban on receiving the sacraments, which results from excommunication, would "be left to the person's conscience." Frances Kissling, then CFC president, said, "What we would advise people in that diocese to say is that, 'We consider ourselves to be Catholics in good faith, and we think you have rendered the wrong opinion, and to go about their lives as Catholics."

See also

References

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    Dillon, Michele (1999). Catholic identity: balancing reason, faith, and power. Cambridge University Press.
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  4. Robert L. Fastiggi (2010). New Catholic Encyclopedia Supplement 2009. Gale/Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-1-4144-7527-1. Retrieved June 11, 2012. Catholic bishops and conferences of bishops have consistently repudiated the claim of CFFC to be a Catholic organization.
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