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Kerry meets with cardinal

Talk follows criticismof stance on abortion

WASHINGTON -- John F. Kerry, facing criticism from some Roman Catholics for his views on abortion and other social issues, met yesterday with the head of a task force examining possible sanctions for politicians who stray from the church's teachings.

The meeting with Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick, which the Democratic presidential contender's campaign staff would describe only as "personal and private," came at Kerry's request and was scheduled this week, according to a spokeswoman for the Washington archbishop. On Sunday, Kerry took Communion at an Easter Mass in Boston despite a warning from the city's archbishop, Sean P. O'Malley, that political figures should not seek the sacrament if they support abortion rights, as does the senator.

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McCarrick spokeswoman Susan Gibbs said the 45-minute session at the pastoral center in Hyattsville, Md., was a private pastoral meeting. While she would not discuss the subject matter, she reiterated McCarrick's belief that "we are to be clear in our teaching, and the faithful are called to understand and live the teaching." At the same time, she added: "Cardinal McCarrick would be reluctant to use the Eucharist as a sanction." O'Malley has warned politicians against seeking it, but has said he would not deny it to them.

McCarrick, who is particularly interested in politics because his archdiocese includes the nation's capital, is chairing a task force set up by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops to examine the relationship between Catholic bishops and Catholic politicians in light of a doctrinal note issued last year by Pope John Paul II.

The Vatican document instructed Catholic politicians that "a well-formed Christian conscience does not permit one to vote for a political program or an individual law which contradicts the fundamental contents of faith and morals." The Vatican also reiterated the pope's position that Catholic lawmakers must oppose abortion, euthanasia, and legal recognition for same-sex marriages. Kerry supports abortion rights; he opposes gay marriage, but favors civil unions for gays and lesbians.

The McCarrick task force is drafting guidelines for bishops; those guidelines are not aimed at the 2004 election, and it is not clear that they will be completed this year. At a meeting of the bishops' conference last fall, bishops discussed various ways to express disapproval of Catholic politicians who vote against key church teachings, such as withholding honorary degrees from Catholic colleges or other honors.

Before traveling to Washington, Kerry held a fund-raising breakfast during which he both announced a new advertising campaign and vowed to run a firm campaign against President Bush.

"I am going to put real choices in front of the country. This isn't going to be any mealy-mouthed, half-assed, you know, namby-pamby campaign," the senator said at the 21 Club to a group of 100 people who donated $25,000 apiece to the Democratic National Committee. All told, Kerry and the party raised $8.9 million over two days.   Continued...

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