World

Argentine Catholics, evangelicals join forces against abortion bill

Proposed legislation will be debated and voted on in Senate on Tuesday

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 27 Dec 2020 6:00PM

Argentine Catholics, evangelicals join forces against abortion bill
A government poll this year finds that 22.3% of Catholics in Argentina believe that a woman should have the right to an abortion if she wants one. – AFP pic, December 27, 2020

BUENOS AIRES – At the entrance to Argentina’s Congress is a plaque reminding legislators that Our Lady of Lujan is the patron saint of the country’s political parties – a not-so-subtle nod to religion in a nation considering whether to allow abortions.

As the Senate prepares to vote on a bill to legalise the practice, the Catholic Church has joined forces with evangelical Christians to fight the measure tooth and nail.

The bill, which aims to legalise voluntary abortions at up to 14 weeks, was passed by the Chamber of Deputies on December 11, and will be debated and voted on in the Senate on Tuesday.

Two years ago, a similar bill passed the lower house, but was defeated in the Senate following a determined campaign by both Catholics and evangelicals.

Argentina’s constitution guarantees freedom of religion, and a 1994 reform removed the requirement that the president be Catholic.

However, it retains a reference to God in its preamble, and its second article guarantees government support for the Catholic Church.

“The Catholic Church in Argentina has great sway. There’s a very strong Catholic culture in the political world,” sociologist Fortunato Mallimaci, who wrote a book on what he says is the myth of Argentine secularism, told AFP.

“Religious groups look for state support, and the state, when it feels weak, looks for support from religious groups. Today, the Catholic Church wields more political than religious clout.”

Catholicism is a strong force in Argentina, the homeland of Pope Francis.

The state pays a salary to archbishops and subsidises Catholic schooling, which accounts for 36% of education in the country, according to Mallimaci.

Francis stays silent

However, Catholicism has been losing influence as evangelical Christianity gains ground.

According to a 2019 poll by a government agency, 62% of Argentines identify as Catholic, 18.9% as non-religious and 15.3% as evangelical.

The Catholic Church’s sway can be seen in Argentina’s delay compared to other countries in adopting a number of laws: divorce was legalised only in 1987, sex education introduced in 2006, gay marriage approved in 2010, and a gender identity law passed in 2012.

Abortion is currently only allowed in two cases: rape, and a danger to the mother’s life.

“There is an opposition and huge rejection from the Catholic Church, which weighs heavily” on the chances of the law passing, said constitutional lawyer Alfonso Santiago.

However, he believes the relationship between the government of President Alberto Fernandez, who sponsored the abortion bill, and the Catholic Church will remain strong, regardless of which way the vote goes.

“I don’t think there will be a break in collaboration on other issues. It didn’t happen before” when, for example, same-sex marriage was approved, he said.

While Francis has in the past likened abortion to hiring an assassin, he has remained silent on the current debate.

Protest strength

“The problem for the Catholic Church if abortion is legalised is that it will be up to it, and not the state, to ensure that its faithful comply with a prohibition that will be only religious,” said Mallimaci.

A government poll this year found that 22.3% of Catholics in Argentina believe that a woman should have the right to an abortion if she wants one.

Meanwhile, 55.7% said it should be permitted only in certain situations, while just 17.2% support a blanket ban.

Since 2018, evangelicals have come to the fore in protesting legalisation.

“They have the momentum of the reborn,” said Mallimaci, pointing to the light-blue handkerchiefs brandished by evangelicals at their protests, as a counterweight to the green ones sported by abortion rights activists.

“Catholics don’t mobilise in that way.”

Despite their constant growth, evangelical churches in Argentina “don’t have the same political weight as in other countries, such as Brazil, where they can count on a parliamentary bloc”.

Their strength, however, lies in street protests, and they will be out in force on Tuesday in front of Congress, face to face with abortion rights demonstrators. – AFP, December 27, 2020

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