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In eight years in the White House, President Ronald Wilson
Reagan drew Catholic support with his stands on abortion and
aid to private schools but was often at loggerheads with the
Catholic bishops on issues ranging from nuclear defense and
welfare reform to U.S. policy in Central America.
The former president --- who died June 5 at age 93 after
struggling with Alzheimer's disease for a decade --- played
a major role in shaping world events in the last decade of
the Cold War and established formal U.S. diplomatic relations
with the Holy See.
Pope John Paul II planned to send a representative to Reagan's
June 11 funeral at the Washington National Cathedral. A papal
spokesman said the pontiff, who was in Bern, Switzerland,
June 5-6, was saddened to learn of Reagan's death and had
prayed for the "eternal rest of his soul." The pope paid tribute
to the late president, noting his important role in the fall
of European communism.
Among the features of the Reagan presidency:
---Reagan's firm opposition to Democratic initiatives to
provide government funding for abortion brought frequent praise
from Catholic officials. As governor of California (1967-75),
he had signed what in 1967 was one of the nation's most liberal
abortion laws; but as president he favored a constitutional
amendment to outlaw all abortions except those necessary to
preserve the mother's life.
---Abroad, he instituted the Mexico City policy, which barred
overseas family planning organizations from receiving U.S.
aid for any program that also included abortion services or
abortion advocacy.
---In his campaign for the presidency, Reagan ran on a platform
of smaller government, but during his two terms the U.S. debt
quadrupled as he cut taxes and nonmilitary spending but launched
the largest peacetime military buildup in U.S. history. The
Soviet Union's effort to keep pace with U.S. arms spending
contributed to the economic and political disintegration of
the Soviet bloc in 1989-90.
---Reagan's nuclear saber-rattling in his 1980 presidential
campaign also prompted the November 1980 initiative by the
U.S. bishops that led to their landmark 1983 pastoral letter
on the morality of nuclear warfare and nuclear deterrence.
---His presidency marked the ascendancy of Republican neoconservatism
in the country and a significant practical shift of American
Catholics to the GOP camp, as pro-abortion ideology hardened
among the Democratic leadership.
---His espousal of free market economics and opposition
to government regulation often led U.S. bishops to oppose
Reagan administration policies they saw as harming the poorest
and most vulnerable segments of society. One example was in
housing for the poor. Between 1979 and 1987, federal funding
for such housing was cut by 75 percent while the number of
homeless in America rose from 200,000 to 2 million.
---The Reagan administration's focus on containing communism
militarily in Central America was a source of ongoing conflict
with the U.S. bishops. The bishops criticized the administration's
increased military aid to the right-wing government in El
Salvador amid ongoing reports of massive human rights violations
by the Salvadoran military, including numerous attacks on
church personnel.
---In Nicaragua he supported the struggle of the right-wing
Contra guerrillas against the leftist Sandinista government.
A major scandal hit his administration in 1986-87 when it
was learned that senior U.S. officials had arranged secret
arms sales to Iran and diverted the profits into covert military
aid to the Contras to circumvent Congress' denial of Contra
funding.
---When Congress was considering a Reagan request for $14
million in military aid to the Contras in 1985, Reagan told
news photographers that the pope "has been most supportive
of all our activities in Central America." The Vatican Embassy
denied that the pope had expressed support for particular
policies, and in congressional testimony on behalf of the
U.S. bishops the following day Archbishop (later Cardinal)
James A. Hickey of Washington described U.S. support for the
Contra insurgency as "illegal and, in our judgment, immoral."
Congress voted down the aid proposal.
---The one issue on which Reagan and the bishops were most
deeply and publicly divided was U.S. nuclear policy. When
the U.S. bishops met in November 1980, it was just days after
Reagan was elected president on a campaign platform that included
promises to launch a massive new U.S. military buildup and
achieve nuclear superiority over the Soviet Union.
In his 1983 book "The Bishops and the Bomb," Jim Castelli
wrote that during that meeting "Reagan's election --- with
the rhetoric and policies he brought to office --- was the
single greatest factor influencing the bishops' discussion"
of a proposal to develop a statement addressing nuclear warfare
and nuclear deterrence.
As the bishops' peace pastoral went through three drafts
over the next 30 months, the administration waged a vigorous
battle to influence it and change its direction. Top administration
officials, including National Security Adviser William P.
Clark and Defense Secretary Casper Weinberger, published detailed
critiques.
Aside from the pastoral itself, in public statements, congressional
testimony and other forums the bishops opposed Reagan proposals
to build neutron warheads, plans for deploying M-X missiles
and funding for his massive Strategic Defense Initiative,
popularly dubbed "Star Wars."
---The bishops supported Reagan's 1987 agreement with Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev on a historic treaty to eliminate
intermediate-range nuclear forces in Europe. Domestically,
the bishops and Catholic Charities officials were sharply
critical of the social welfare cuts that appeared in every
annual Reagan budget.
---In 1984 Reagan appointed the first U.S. ambassador to
the Holy See in 117 years, after getting Congress to repeal
an 1867 law barring any funding for a U.S. embassy to what
were then the Papal States.
---Reagan, who had met with Pope Paul VI in 1972 while in
Europe as a representative of President Nixon, met with Pope
John Paul II at the Vatican in 1982 and again in 1987. They
also met in Alaska in 1984, when Reagan was on his way home
from China and the pope on his way to South Korea, and in
Miami when the pope visited the United States in 1987. The
two exchanged letters or spoke by phone on a number of other
occasions.
---In late 1981, when Poland imposed martial law and arrested
leaders of the independent labor movement Solidarity, Reagan
imposed U.S. economic sanctions and supported the movement
in a variety of ways. In 1992, an article in Time magazine
claimed that when the president and pope met in 1982 they
formed a "holy alliance" to destroy communism in Poland, setting
in motion a joint operation to undermine the government there.
The pope personally denied the allegations.
---Reagan also had friendly relationships with U.S. Catholic
leaders. On a number of occasions he met with the elected
officers of the bishops' conference or with individual leaders
such as the late Cardinals John Krol of Philadelphia and Terence
Cooke of New York. Cardinal Cooke visited him in Washington
as he was recovering from the bullet wounds suffered in the
1981 attempt on his life. In 1983 he paid a special visit
to Cardinal Cooke in New York as the cardinal was nearing
death from leukemia.
---Reagan
appointed three U.S. Supreme Court justices and elevated William
Rehnquist to chief justice. He appointed Sandra Day O'Connor,
the court's first female justice, and two Catholics, Antonin
Scalia and Anthony M. Kennedy, giving the court three sitting
justices who were Catholic for the first time in history.
---Reagan's father was a Catholic, but he was raised in
his mother's denomination, the Christian Church (Disciples
of Christ), and graduated from Eureka College, a Disciples-related
school in Illinois. Before his divorce from his first wife,
Jane Wyman, he attended Hollywood-Beverly Christian Church.
He and his second wife, Nancy, attended Bel Air Presbyterian
Church.
---Although he did not attend church frequently, he said
he prayed often. Jesus "has been a part of my life. I can't
conceive of a day in which I don't find myself communicating
with him," he said in an interview during his 1980 presidential
campaign.
---CNS
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