
April 16, 2004
Kerry Meets With Key Cardinal
Church Mulls Sanctions Against Wayward Catholic Politicians
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The presumptive Democratic nominee and McCarrick declined to comment after the 45-minute session, with Kerry telling aides that the meeting was “completely personal and private,” according to spokesman David Wade.
Susan Gibbs, a spokeswoman for the Washington archdiocese, said Kerry and McCarrick, who had never met, had “a chance to get to know each other” at a session requested by Kerry. Gibbs said she couldn't say if the work of the task force had come up, but said she “wouldn't expect it to particularly.”
Aides to Kerry said the meeting had been in the works for months, but it came just days after McCarrick, in a national television interview, raised the specter of punishing Catholic politicians who break with the church in supporting abortion rights and stem-cell research.
Gibbs described the session as a private pastoral meeting held at the archdiocese's center in Hyattsville, Md., close to Howard University where Kerry held a campaign event earlier in the day.
The first Catholic poised to get a presidential nomination since John F. Kennedy in 1960, Kerry has been criticized by some church leaders for taking stands in conflict with his faith's teachings while regularly attending Mass and receiving the sacrament of communion.
In other political developments:
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