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President Joe Biden participates in a CNN town hall at Mount St. Joseph University in Cincinnati July 21, 2021. (CNS photo/Jonathan Ernst, Reuters)

Pro-life groups criticize Catholic university for hosting Biden town hall

July 22, 2021
By Catholic News Service
Catholic News Service
Filed Under: Feature, News, Respect Life, World News

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CINCINNATI (CNS) — A few hours before CNN’s evening town hall with President Joe Biden on the campus of a Cincinnati Catholic university, the congregation of women religious that founded the school said the sisters were not involved in planning or hosting the July 21 event.

“All decisions about the event are being made” by CNN and Mount St. Joseph University “and do not involve the Sisters of Charity,” the statement said. “CNN is utilizing the Mount’s facility and will make the decisions on attendance at the event, whose questions will be asked of the president, etc.”

Objections from Right to Life of Greater Cincinnati and other pro-life groups were mounting ahead of the one-hour evening event on the Catholic campus because Biden, who is Catholic, supports keeping abortion legal.

He also has disavowed his decades of support for the long-standing Hyde Amendment, which bans federal funding of abortions except when the mother’s life is endangered and in cases of rape and incest.

Late July 20 a statement issued by the Cincinnati Archdiocese said Archbishop Dennis M. Schnurr had not been contacted by “any involved party” about Biden’s participation, and if it had been up to the archbishop, it said, he would not have allowed Biden to hold a July 21 town hall event at the Catholic university.

“Archbishop Schnurr has therefore not been asked for, nor would he have granted, his approval for any such event to occur on Catholic premises,” it said, adding that the university “operates under the sponsorship of the Sisters of Charity and not under the direct oversight of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati.”

Established by the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati, the university opened its doors to its first 20 students in 1920 as the first Catholic university for women in southwestern Ohio.

“The Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati are pleased for Mount St. Joseph University and its selection by CNN as the site of this week’s Presidential Town Hall with the president of the United States,” the congregation’s statement said. “Being selected for this honor recognizes the Mount as an outstanding institution of higher learning.”

It added that the sisters wished “to clarify that the agreement to schedule” the July 21 event at the university “is between MSJ and CNN. All decisions about the event are being made by CNN and MSJ and do not involve the Sisters of Charity.”

“Mount St. Joseph University is one of five institutions we sponsor in the Greater Cincinnati area,” the statement said. “Each institution has a different mission and is overseen by a separate governing board of trustees or directors. MSJ is an institution of higher learning.

“As such, its mission is to provide the opportunity and space for the free exchange and rigorous examination of information and ideas. It is committed to being a diverse and inclusive setting, respecting ideas across ideologies, ethnicities, races and social backgrounds.”

For its part, the university said in a statement that it looked forward to introducing the school to “a nationally televised prime-time audience.”

“The university has always been and will continue to be a diverse and inclusive place where people from different races, ethnicities, social backgrounds, beliefs and religions can come together to discuss and share their unique perspectives,” it added.

The audience for the town hall included Democrats and Republicans. Biden took questions on COVID-19 and the Delta variant, infrastructure, the economy and jobs, among other issues.

He told those not yet vaccinated: “It’s a simple proposition: If you’re vaccinated, you’re not going to be hospitalized, be in an ICU. You’re not going to die.”

With regard to jobs, Biden said the extended federal unemployment benefits are not why people are not working, because those without jobs would go back to work, he said, if they got paid more. “If you make less than $15 an hour working 40 hours a week, you’re below the poverty level,” he said.

Pro-life protesters demonstrated near the Mount St. Joseph campus, but before the town hall, outside an electrical job training center Biden toured, other protesters demanded Biden stick to his campaign promises on the environment.

Also see

Planned Parenthood defunding remains in question amid legal challenges

Ireland’s abortion rates rise 62 percent over 5 years; Catholic advocates call it ‘a tragedy’

Judge blocks defunding of some, but not all, Planned Parenthood groups

Is NFP finally breaking into medical schools?

Nearly one in three conceptions in England and Wales end in abortion, government figures reveal

Planned Parenthood

Judge blocks, for now, Planned Parenthood defunding provision backed by bishops

Copyright © 2021 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

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