Dems are generally anti-religion. It interferes with their true God, the state. That aside, they really do have a problem. Good.
https://amac.us/newsline/elections/...rges-in-pennsylvania-show-deeper-dem-problem/
Just as a troubled Harris presidential campaign is struggling with a decline in poll numbers and favorability ratings, emerging reports of pessimism and infighting among aides, and a conspicuously embarrassing last-minute dispute among her supporters over basic strategies like attacking Trump and adjusting policy positions, the Democrat nominee is also having to deal in a critical swing state with the consequences of her campaign’s earlier failure to handle a Catholic voter problem identified several weeks ago in a Politico article titled “Kamala Harris’ Pennsylvania Problem.”
Harris’s latest challenge is the release in Pennsylvania of a widely watched ad narrated by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and produced by CatholicVote that directly criticizes her and labels the Democrat Party as “the party of war, censorship, and corruption,” and urges Catholic voters to “love our children more than we hate each other” and to vote for Donald Trump. Simultaneously, however, Harris’s fortunes with Catholic voters are being complicated by a challenge to her down-ticket running mate, Senate Democrat Bob Casey, who himself is being confronted with attacks on the same issue. In a tight race against David McCormick, a West Point graduate and successful businessman positioning Casey as a career politician, the incumbent Democrat is being targeted by two-minute ads in both Spanish and English, broadcast on Hispanic TV morning and nightly news in Philadelphia, which criticize his own and the Democrat Party’s record of anti-Catholic bias. These ads, previously used in five Senate races and now reintroduced in Pennsylvania for the final campaign week, aim to influence Philadelphia’s 250,000 Hispanic voters—voters who could be decisive in Casey’s race against McCormick.
Although the Kennedy and Casey ads differ in tone, they share significant themes that may have real appeal to Catholics and thus could mean trouble for both Democratic candidates. Kennedy’s ad is inspirational yet pointed; he speaks of his Catholicism as the “foundation for a lifetime of striving to perfect my personal relationship with God.” Catholics, Kennedy says, should “strive to perfect ourselves through conscious contact with our Creator, knowing that in human form, we are never going to achieve perfection.” He attributes his hope for improvement to his support for Trump: “President Trump has promised to take bold action on our economy, on the border, and on restoring children’s health,” signaling how far the Democrat Party has drifted from Catholic values.
https://amac.us/newsline/elections/...rges-in-pennsylvania-show-deeper-dem-problem/
Just as a troubled Harris presidential campaign is struggling with a decline in poll numbers and favorability ratings, emerging reports of pessimism and infighting among aides, and a conspicuously embarrassing last-minute dispute among her supporters over basic strategies like attacking Trump and adjusting policy positions, the Democrat nominee is also having to deal in a critical swing state with the consequences of her campaign’s earlier failure to handle a Catholic voter problem identified several weeks ago in a Politico article titled “Kamala Harris’ Pennsylvania Problem.”
Harris’s latest challenge is the release in Pennsylvania of a widely watched ad narrated by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and produced by CatholicVote that directly criticizes her and labels the Democrat Party as “the party of war, censorship, and corruption,” and urges Catholic voters to “love our children more than we hate each other” and to vote for Donald Trump. Simultaneously, however, Harris’s fortunes with Catholic voters are being complicated by a challenge to her down-ticket running mate, Senate Democrat Bob Casey, who himself is being confronted with attacks on the same issue. In a tight race against David McCormick, a West Point graduate and successful businessman positioning Casey as a career politician, the incumbent Democrat is being targeted by two-minute ads in both Spanish and English, broadcast on Hispanic TV morning and nightly news in Philadelphia, which criticize his own and the Democrat Party’s record of anti-Catholic bias. These ads, previously used in five Senate races and now reintroduced in Pennsylvania for the final campaign week, aim to influence Philadelphia’s 250,000 Hispanic voters—voters who could be decisive in Casey’s race against McCormick.
Although the Kennedy and Casey ads differ in tone, they share significant themes that may have real appeal to Catholics and thus could mean trouble for both Democratic candidates. Kennedy’s ad is inspirational yet pointed; he speaks of his Catholicism as the “foundation for a lifetime of striving to perfect my personal relationship with God.” Catholics, Kennedy says, should “strive to perfect ourselves through conscious contact with our Creator, knowing that in human form, we are never going to achieve perfection.” He attributes his hope for improvement to his support for Trump: “President Trump has promised to take bold action on our economy, on the border, and on restoring children’s health,” signaling how far the Democrat Party has drifted from Catholic values.