The #CatholicVote2019 debate produced and hosted by the Archdiocese of Toronto on Oct. 3 attracted about 1,000 people to the John Bassett Theatre in the Metro Toronto Convention Centre downtown, but also went live to thousands more as it was livestreamed in parish halls, offices and homes from coast to coast. During the event about 1,000 screens were tuned into the debate, some of them representing an audience of over 150 people watching on large screens at their parishes.
The whole point was to present a Catholic approach to politics that relies on reason and discernment, Cardinal Thomas Collins said before the debate got underway.
“We need to have people engage in rational discourse with one another in a courteous way,” the archbishop of Toronto told The Catholic Register. “They can still disagree. They can still feel passionately about what they say and they may passionately disagree with the positions taken by others. But they should be able to discuss and continue the conversation.”
Too often politics today devolves into shouting, slogans and a tragic failure to listen, Collins said.
“When we shut down the conversation by, for example, calling people names or something then what more do we say? The conversation ends,” he said.
The debate was also an opportunity for Catholics with a stake in particular issues to put questions to the politicians. In pre-recorded videos projected on a large screen behind the candidates Sr. John Mary, Toronto superior of the Toronto Sisters of Life, posed questions about abortion, palliative care and euthanasia; Carl Hétu, national director of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association, asked candidates about persecution of Christians worldwide; Office of Refugees, Archdiocese of Toronto director Deacon Rudy Ovcjak asked about refugee policy; teacher Jeff Cole and and Grade 11 student Emmerson Garces from Patrick Fogarty Catholic Secondary School challenged the politicians on climate change.
“And why should they not have their voice heard and their questions presented before the people in power?” Collins asked.
It’s overwhelmingly people of faith who run shelters and food banks, help refugees begin a new life, lobby governments for affordable housing, reach out to the ill and the abandoned, said Collins.
“This country would be a colder and darker place were it not for people of faith,” said Collins. “Their voice should speak out loudly. All of these issues are important for us because they are matters of faith and reason, and people on the ground are going to be asking the questions.”
The five national party representatives each made a case that their parties valued the contributions faith communities, prioritized families, believed in a cleaner environment and economic opportunities, and welcomed individuals from all faith backgrounds in their two-minute opening statements.
On the specifics, none of the parties with sitting Members of Parliament could commit to writing abortion back into the criminal code, though Conservative Party representative Garnett Genuis, MP for the Alberta riding of Sherwood Park-Fort Saskatchewan, trumpeted that his party would allow its members to express their views at March for Life rallies and on social media. Genuis also hammered the Liberals on their 2018 summer jobs policy requiring employers to certify that they do not actively oppose abortion.
People’s Party candidate David Haskell claimed his party already has legislation written that would ban third-trimester abortions, but the party has no elected MPs and on the day of the debate was polling at one per cent in a Nanos poll.
On refugees, NDP candidate for Hamilton Centre Matthew Green called for the next government to scrap the Safe Third Country Agreement with the United States, pointing out that his ancestors, escaped slaves who travelled the underground railway to Canada, were the first Christian refugees to Canada. Both Genuis and Liberal MP for Vaughan-Woodbridge Francesco Sorbara claimed they would dramatically expand private sponsorship of refugees, a program dominated by Church groups.
Genuis drew applause by promising to revive the cancelled Office for Religious Freedom headed by an ambassador. Sorbara was hit with a negative outburst from the audience when he said the Office for Religious Freedom had been “ineffective.”
Green Party candidate for Don Valley East Dan Turcotte was handed the perfect foil in Haskell, who said there was “room for doubt” about climate change.
“We need to end our subsidies for fossil fuels,” Turcotte said. “We have the most beautiful country in the world and we need to be leaders.”
The event was largely ignored by national media, with the National Post sending a reporter and photographer, and Radio Canada sending a French language reporter. Coverage was extensive in major faith-based media, including live broadcast of the debate by Salt+Light TV and the Evangelical Crossroad Communications program “Context With Lorna Dueck.”
Within 12 hours over 3,400 people had watched the two-hour-and-10-minute debate on YouTube.
The #CatholicVote2019 rose to the fifth most used hashtag in Toronto on Twitter during the debate.