Congressman Cao of Louisiana on US Health Care Reform: "I'd Rather Save My Soul"

GOP Congressman Cao of Louisiana, a devout Jesuit-trained Roman Catholic and the first Vietnamese-American elected to Congress, has told the New Orleans Times Picuyune that because of the "stealth mandate" for abortion still present in the Health Care bill, he prefers to "save his soul" rather than  vote in favor of it. The story from the Catholic News Agency:

Cao, the only member of the Louisiana House delegation who had not weighed in on where he stands on the health reform bill, told the Times-Picayune on Saturday that he cannot support any bill that permits public money to be spent on abortion.

"At the end of the day if the health care reform bill does not have strong language prohibiting the use of federal funding for abortion, then the bill is really a no-go for me," said Cao, who spent time in formation to be a Jesuit priest.

"Being a Jesuit, I very much adhere to the notion of social justice," Cao said. "I do fully understand the need of providing everyone with access to health care, but to me personally, I cannot be privy to a law that will allow the potential of destroying thousands of innocent lives," he explained to the Louisiana newspaper.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee announced that Cao will be one of seven Republican members of Congress targeted with radio ads that will play on radio stations with largely African-American audiences, urging him to support Obama's health reform efforts.

"I know that voting against the health care bill will probably be the death of my political career," Cao said, "but I have to live with myself, and I always reflect on the phrase of the New Testament, `How does it profit a man's life to gain the world but to lose his soul.'"

Cao is the first native of Vietnam to serve in Congress and the first Republican to serve in his district since 1890. He won in a district that usually votes overwhelmingly Democratic.

The poorest member of Louisiana's delegation, and a devout Roman Catholic, Cao served as a board member for Mary Queen of Vietnam Catholic Church's Community Development Corporation which assists Vietnamese-Americans with hurricane relief, and is a member of the National Advisory Council of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Cao also told the Times-Picayune that he is still undecided about the merits of including a public option in any health reform redesign. He believes that it may ultimately lead to the destruction of the private insurance market and a "government takeover" of health insurance.

I'm struck that someone who proclaims to adhere to a "notion of social justice" isn't troubled by the fact that 17,000 Americans die every year due to lack of health insurance. Saving the unborn is a priority but saving the living not so much.

Tags: Catholics in Politics, Congressman Anh “Joseph” Cao, US Health Care Reform (all tags)

Comments

13 Comments

Re: Congressman Cao of Louisiana

1.He's a Republican and hence a complete buffoon. He happens to be using his "Catholic" Buffoon Hat for this particular clown outing, and although this is by far his biggest hat, he has many others.
He's from the Nutbag wing of the Catholic Community: "A devout Roman Catholic, Cao served as a board member for Mary Queen of Vietnam Catholic Church's Community Development Corporation[9] which assists Vietnamese-Americans with hurricane relief,[10] and is a member of the National Advisory Council of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.[11]" wikipedia

wikipedia: "Cao defeated nine-term Democratic U.S. Representative William Jefferson with 49.6 percent of the vote to Jefferson's 46.8 percent."

The Democrats, which make up a majority of Cao's district chose not to re-elect the Democrat they had sent to Congress for nine terms. Why the Democratic Party chose not to run a different candidate is a good question.

Hopefully Cao will not be re-elected, but rather allowed to go back to Church full-time.

by QTG 2009-08-04 12:35PM | 0 recs
Re: Congressman Cao of Louisiana

Sorry about the redundancies. We'll just call it 'review'.

by QTG 2009-08-04 12:37PM | 0 recs
Re: Congressman Cao of Louisiana

You are totally wrong in blaming the party. You should only blame the people of Jefferson's district.

FROM THE WIKI:
The two candidates who survived the first ballot were both African-American Democrats: Jefferson got 30% of the vote, and State Representative Karen Carter, who enjoyed support from the Louisiana Democratic Party's establishment, picked up nearly all endorsements from local politicians and the local press and gathered 22% of the vote.

In the last week of [runoff]campaign, however, Jefferson Parish Sheriff a Democrat, urged voters not to vote for Carter. In response to Carter's criticism of Gretna police officers and Jefferson Parish deputies, who had blocked the Crescent City Connection and prevented evacuees from fleeing New Orleans in the aftermath of Katrina, Lee mailed out 25,000 fliers and made public statements attacking Carter.

....

Voter turnout dwindled from 24.15% to 16.25%. While residents of the city of New Orleans gave Jefferson a slight majority over Carter, (51% to 49%), the Jefferson Parish share of the district voted for Jefferson by a staggering 71% to 29%, clearly swinging the election in his favor.

by MNPundit 2009-08-04 01:06PM | 0 recs
Re: Congressman Cao of Louisiana

 I would blame them (the people of Jefferson's district), but after what they went through, I don't think I can ever blame them for anything ever. They get a permanent pass from me.

by QTG 2009-08-04 04:54PM | 0 recs
If it pleases the court

Most observers think if not for Hurricane Katrina, Jefferson would have gone down in 2006...the base voters Karen Carter needed to win left New Orleans after Katrina and weren't there in 2006.

by DTOzone 2009-08-04 05:47PM | 0 recs
Re: If it pleases the court

 I am well aware, and eternally saddened by the fact that Hurricane Hurricane Katrina caused the biggest mass migration in US history, and it's consequences for real families with unique cultural roots - now withering. The results, politically, are certainly sad but fall short of tragedy. Cao is a freak of circumstance, twisted religion, and who knows what personal demons. Now he's doing Satan's work in the name of his twisted hateful vindictive sick vision of a a wrathful god. Fuck him. Some one please put some serious voo-doo on his ass.

by QTG 2009-08-04 05:57PM | 0 recs
Re: If it pleases the court

Really? I would think those are the voters who would most susceptible to voting Jefferson because at that stage they could convince themselves he was being railroaded by the powerful.

by MNPundit 2009-08-05 11:11PM | 0 recs
Actually the party wanted to get rid

of Jefferson and many of party elite supported Cao under the table this year because their choice in 2006, Karen Carter, was defeated by Jefferson.

They figured the only way they can beat him was with a Republican and elect the Democrat they want in 2010.

by DTOzone 2009-08-04 05:45PM | 0 recs
Re: Congressman Cao of Louisiana

Hopefully Cao will not be re-elected, but rather allowed to go back to Church full-time.

I think you need invest only slightly more hope in that outcome than I "hope" the sun still rises tomorrow morning.

Cao was destined to be a one-term Congressman from the moment he won his seat, regardless of how he voted during that term.  He's a Republican Congressman representing one of the five most soldily Democratic-leaning Congressional districts in the United States.  He represents the city of New Orleans, for God's sakes.

The only reason the man has a job at all is because the nimrods in that district just asumed Dollar Bill Jefferson would cruise to re-election, despite being one of the most corrupt members of the last Congress.  The man is lucky he isn't in prison, yet.

I could run as a Democrat in that district and if I could get the nomination, I could beat Cao without even trying.

Frankly, I think it's a total waste of DCCC to use money to try to sway Cao to take the right path on healthcare reform.

He's a Republican, and there's is absolutely no benefit for him in voting with the Dems on this bill.  He's gonna be a one-termer no matter what he does, so he's gonna vote with Republican interests, his constituents be damned - he knows they aren't gonna re-elect him no matter how he votes on this, so what self-serving incentive does he have to be supportive of healthcare reform?

And I'm not excusing his atrocious stance, just saying that on a pragmatic level, it makes no sense whatsoever for him to be willing to vote with the Democrats on this issue, or for that matter, any issue.

by Obamaphile 2009-08-04 07:52PM | 0 recs
Re: Congressman Cao of Louisiana

The last paragraph of this post does a good job of tying Democratic policy objectives to moral issues.  Maybe elected Democrats should do a little more of this, instead of letting people like Cao act like they're the only person in the room with deeply held beliefs.

by Steve M 2009-08-04 02:22PM | 0 recs
Re: Congressman Cao of Louisiana on US Health Care

Don't worry, Joe, your political career was over anyway.

by Thaddeus 2009-08-04 02:39PM | 0 recs
Re: Congressman Cao of Louisiana on US Health Care

"Being a Jesuit?"  You're an ex-Jesuit, Joe, unless my attending a Jesuit high school and university makes me a Jesuit.

Clown.

by Thaddeus 2009-08-04 02:41PM | 0 recs
Henry Hyde Lives!

He was resurrected as a Vietnamese-American, it seems. Or was it soul transfer? No, you would have to have a soul to be transferred.

by antiHyde 2009-08-04 05:14PM | 0 recs

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