Mitt Romney’s secret Irish Catholic Weapon - Senior Adviser Peter Flaherty
Posted on Thursday, August 30, 2012 at 09:11 AM
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| Peter Flaherty |
Timothy Cardinal Dolan? Nope. Paul Ryan? Nope.
His name is Peter Flaherty and he is a senior adviser to Romney, and prefers to keep himself out of the spotlight. Which is a little odd given that Flaherty has worked in both national politics as well as Hollywood.
Nevertheless, Flaherty is described as one of Romney’s closest aides. His main job? Persuading Irish Americans and other Roman Catholics that Romney is the man they should vote for.
Much attention was paid when it was announced that Dolan would say the closing prayer at this week’s Republican Convention. “The move is perhaps the clearest sign of a more aggressive push by Republicans to win over Roman Catholic voters this election cycle,” according to The New York Times.
But Romney’s close relationship to Flaherty is arguably more important.
When Romney served as Massachusetts governor Flaherty was his liaison to Catholics, including Boston’s Sean Cardinal O’Malley.
While much has been made about Romney’s “invitation” (as the Times put it) to Dolan, the New York Catholic leader also made it clear he would do the same thing for the Democrats. Rather stupidly, the Democrats have apparently declined Dolan’s offer.
Yes, there are major differences between the church and the Democratic Party - on gays and abortion among other things.
However, it would seem that President Obama would want to stress common ground, especially when every Catholic vote counts in battleground states like Pennsylvania, Ohio and Wisconsin.
Meanwhile, Romney’s Catholic running mate Ryan has been lauded for his budget-cutting proposals, but guess what organization slammed Ryan for slashing social services and even misunderstanding the Catholic doctrine of “subsidiarity”?
None other than the U.S. Conference of Catholic bishops. And who leads that organization? You guessed it, Timothy Cardinal Dolan.
No, if you really want to get a sense of how the Republicans are going to try and sway Catholics away from Obama you’ve got to listen to Flaherty, who told the Times, “We’re going to have outreach to Catholics in a coordinated, organized effort — state by state, diocese by diocese, parish by parish and pew by pew.”
Flaherty grew up in Arlington, Massachusetts and graduated from the College of the Holy Cross, majoring in economics. An Irish American aunt named Eileen Gill was murdered in Boston when Flaherty was young, and he has long said that terrible crime spurred him to fight the bad guys.
Flaherty became an assistant district attorney in Suffolk County before going to work for his brother, Michael, who runs Walden Media in Hollywood.
Flaherty returned east and began volunteering for Romney, and has been with the GOP candidate ever since.
Inevitably, the question arises of whether or not there really is a “Catholic vote” in America.
Obviously, the days of Roman Catholics voting largely for the party of JFK are over. Irish and other white ethnic Catholics are much more willing to vote Republican these days, while Hispanic Catholics are generally Democratic.
Nevertheless, it would be silly for either Romney or Obama to dismiss 25 percent of the voting population who - for all of their differences - share important key factors.
First and foremost, they are clustered in key battleground states. Also, while polls show that a majority of American Catholics are generally not opposed to birth control and abortion, they are also reverent and respectful towards religion in a way that Republicans can take advantage of. That’s why it seems such a blunder for the Democrats to not accept Cardinal Dolan’s offer to pray at their convention. It is the type of small thing someone like Peter Flaherty could make a big deal out of.
(Contact “Sidewalks” at tomdeignan@earthlink.net or tdeignan.blogspot.com)
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tomdoh345 | Nov 08, 2012, 09:52 AM EST
" When Romney served as Massachusetts governor Flaherty was his liaison to Catholics, including Boston’s Sean Cardinal O’Malley ". Well if this guy advised Romney to fire Billy Bulger as President of the University of Massachusetts System, it was a big mistake. I was ( as were many other Massachusetts Irish Americans ) rather neutral to Romney until he pulled this publicity stunt as Gov. If us Irish Americans were all fired because of the actions of a few of our relatives, few of us would have jobs. Also I do not understand IrishCentral's Pro Romney stand. 96% of Independent Ireland's population would vote for Obama if they could. This should tell you something about the dumbing down of the USA ( including the Irish ).
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eiriamach | Sep 06, 2012, 03:11 PM EDT
@el rubio, sorry for the delay. The most recent Pew Forum data of the kind you ask about are from 2008: Among white Non-Hispanic Catholics who attend church at least weekly, 45% supported Obama and 45% supported McCain. Among those who attend church less often, 53% supported Obama and 38% supported McCain. The data are different for white evangelical Protestants: 17% of those who attend church at least weekly and 37% of those who attend church less often supported Obama; 74% who attend church weekly and 54% of those who attend church less often supported McCain ("How Church Attendance Affects Religious Voting Patterns," ANALYSIS October 23, 2008). Among voters not affiliated with any religion, 65% Obama and 25% McCain (Nov 08 Pew data). In July 2012, total Catholic support for Obama was 51% and for Romney 49%. Those from all religious groups who "attend religious services weekly or more" support Obama 41% and Romney 52%, and those who attend less than weekly 57% for Obama, 37% for Romney. I expect Pew researchers to have the data for this year on church attendance any day now.
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el rubio | Sep 03, 2012, 01:08 PM EDT
eriamach, any polling data on white Catholics who regularly attend mass v. those self identified Catholics who attend infrequently or not at all?
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eiriamach | Sep 02, 2012, 03:09 PM EDT
This interpretation is misleading: "Irish and other white ethnic Catholics are much more willing to vote Republican these days, while Hispanic Catholics are generally Democratic." According to the Pew Research Center Report of 12 Aug. 2012, "While most Catholics who are aware of the bishops’ protests agree with their concerns, about half of Catholic voters (51%) say Barack Obama best reflects their views on social issues such as abortion and gay rights; 34% say Mitt Romney best reflects their views on these issues. Obama’s lead on social issues among Catholics is about as wide as his lead among all voters (50% to 36%)." It's true that more white Catholics are "trending Republican," as EWTN reported in Feb., but Obama's lead among Catholics is so wide that he is likely to carry the Catholic vote despite a 6-point fall-off since 2008. According to the Pew study, 48 percent of Catholics remain either Democrat or Democrat-leaning, compared to 43 percent Republican or Republican-leaning. These figures EXACTLY MATCH the percentages of "All Voters" on party affiliation/leaning. Catholic voting reflects all voting; there is no "Catholic vote" for Romney to lay claim to.
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branagh | Aug 30, 2012, 06:06 PM EDT
Dolan will also do the benediction or whatever it's called for thee Dems-in NYT 3 days ago!
I afraid Romney's senior advisors are mainly very nasty neo-cons active in Bush43 war schemes such as Dan Senor and John Bolton. Senor is effectively an agent for the war faction in Israel and was the source of Romney's semi-racist insights in his visit there that "cultural differences" were the reason for the backwardness of the Palestinians.
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jerrydonovan | Aug 30, 2012, 01:18 PM EDT
On social doctrine Romney/Ryan are so far apart from the Catholic church,I don't believe that the twelve apostles could convince legitimate catholics to support Romney,Ryan.On moral issues when the Romney/Ryan team accepted exceptions on abortions they lost their moral credibility.In my opinion the catholic vote will break in favor of President Obama because of his stand on social issues.
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