logo
Catholic MP warns of ‘witch hunt' over assisted dying bill

Catholic MP warns of ‘witch hunt' over assisted dying bill

Times5 days ago
An MP whose priest denied him communion for voting for assisted dying has warned of a 'witch hunt' of fellow Catholic politicians.
Chris Coghlan's priest wrote to him before the House of Commons vote to legalise assisted dying, warning he would be 'obstinately persevering' in sin if he supported the bill.
Coghlan, a Liberal Democrat, supported the bill despite the threats. It has passed the Commons and will start its journey through the House of Lords in September. Fr Ian Vane, the priest, went on to give three masses publicly denouncing Coghlan for his decision.
Coghlan called for disciplinary sanctions against Vane. Senior figures in the church are understood to have ruled that the priest was within his rights to make the decision, but they are unhappy that the issue was not dealt with in private.
Coghlan said the incident shows there was a 'conflict of interest' for Catholic MPs and Lords.
'I know of at least 13 other Catholic MPs who voted either for assisted dying or to decriminalise abortion, and there appears to be a public witch hunt', Coghlan said. 'The Catholic press is pushing for them to be denied communion as well.
'But we're not here as Catholic MPs, we're here to represent our constituents … this is a clear attempt to meddle with the political process by the church.'
Religion was as strong a predictor of how an MP would vote on the assisted dying bill as the party they belong to. Some 57 per cent of Christian MPs opposed the bill, including 74 per cent of Catholics, compared with 18 per cent of non-believers.
Coghlan, who represents Dorking and Horley in Surrey, said that MPs should be forced to declare their membership of a faith before discussing life issues like abortion and assisted dying. 'In the same way that if you own shares in a company and you're talking about that company in a debate, you would declare that conflict of interest beforehand. And you probably would not vote either.
'I think it's a major problem for parliament in that we have this bill going through right now and the actions of Catholic parliamentarians could have a material impact on that.
'It is incredibly important for public trust in parliament, that parliamentarians are able to demonstrate that they're acting in the best interests of their constituents or the country in the case of the Lords.
'It is hard to see how that is the case if they're also being required by their faith to vote in a certain way, with the threat of public disciplinary sanctions as happened to me, and looks like may happen to other MPs.'
• Assisted dying: 8 practical questions MPs still need to answer
Under the laws of the Roman Catholic church, priests 'cannot deny the sacraments to those who seek them at appropriate times', but there can be exceptions. One law, Canon 915, forbids a priest from administering Holy Communion to those who have been excommunicated or formally barred from the sacrament and also from those they judge to 'obstinately persist in manifest grave sin'.
This gives a priest the right to use their discretion. Cardinal Vincent Nichols, the Archbishop of Westminster, had repeatedly called on Catholics to put pressure on their MPs to oppose the assisted dying bill, but no Catholic bishop or archbishop has been willing to comment publicly on Vane's decision to refuse communion to Coghlan, deeming it to be a matter for the local diocese of Arundel and Brighton.
The priest and diocese were approached for comment. The Diocese of Arundel and Brighton said that neither would provide any further comment.It is understood, however, that some senior figures in the English and Welsh church feel the priest should have taken greater heed of the late Pope Francis's words in 2016 when he said: 'There is a need to avoid judgements which do not take into account the complexity of various situations.'
• How did your MP vote on assisted dying?
Vane's move to publicly declare his decision to his congregation during a mass service is understood to have caused greater consternation among senior clerics. A source said that priests were expected to share the church's teaching and 'accompany individuals' while they are making important decisions, but that this should take place 'in a sheltered environment and not in the glare of public attention'.
In the meantime, Coghlan said, his family had been 'devastated' by the episode. 'The priest gave my daughter her first communion, children from her class were in the congregation, so for him to come out and try and publicly humiliate me … it's difficult not to feel very angry.
'He didn't respect the fact that I'm simply trying to do my job as an MP. We get enough abuse as MPs — you don't expect it from your own priest.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Forget Javanka: Lerica is the new Trump power couple
Forget Javanka: Lerica is the new Trump power couple

The Guardian

time14 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Forget Javanka: Lerica is the new Trump power couple

Once upon a time, before she retired to Florida, Ivanka Trump reportedly had her sights set on being the first female US president. According to a book about the first Trump administration by Michael Wolff, Ivanka made a pact with her husband, Jared Kushner, that 'if sometime in the future the opportunity arose, she'd be the one to run for president'. After 'making' a fortune during Daddy's first term, Ivanka has now sworn off politics. Jared Kushner has also made a big show of leaving government behind, although he's still doing plenty of behind-the-scenes politicking. Per a Times of Israel report from February, Kushner was reportedly behind Trump's plan 'for the US to take over Gaza and clear it of Palestinians'. Nature abhors a vacuum. And into the void left by Javanka, briefly the most influential couple in DC, has stepped Eric and Lara Trump (Lerica?): a terrible twosome with some very big plans. Let's start with crypto bro and hair gel enthusiast Eric, who recently suggested to the Financial Times that he might run for president when his dad's second term ends. 'I think the political path would be an easy one, meaning, I think I could do it,' he said. 'And by the way, I think other members of our family could do it, too.' With oratory skills like that, Eric, you can go anywhere! The other family members Eric was referencing probably include his wife Lara Trump, née Yunaska, who has political ambitions of her own. As the saying goes, when life gives you lemons, you make lemonade; when life gives you a Trump husband who was once accused of stealing lemonade, you cash in on nepotism and call it public service. Like Ivanka, Lara is a big fan of female empowerment. In 2016, she led the Trump-Pence Women's Empowerment Tour, kicking things off by telling a crowd in Ohio: 'We really don't have any idea what we're doing, except we said: 'We've got to go out and tell people what a great guy Donald Trump is.'' She added that her peers leading the initiative were a diverse group of women: 'It speaks to who Donald Trump is, these are all women he's touched in very different ways.' (One imagines Trump's PR people told her not to use that phrase again.) Also like Ivanka, Lara seems to believe that charity begins at home and the most important woman to empower is herself. And she's certainly doing a great job there. In early 2024, Lara was elected co-chair of the Republican National Committee (RNC), after winning the coveted endorsement of her father-in-law. She stepped down later in the year, amid speculation she was mulling a run for North Carolina's open Senate seat in 2026. A busy woman, Lara was also given her own show, My View with Lara Trump, on Fox News this year. Which is handy publicity for her because her Senate run is looking more likely. On Monday, the RNC chair, Michael Whatley, said that if Lara chose to run, 'she is certainly going to have the entire Republican universe – myself included – that are going to coalesce behind her'. While she considers her next move, Lara is busy with what used to be Ivanka's job: softening Donald's image and making him look less like a wildly misogynistic sexual predator and more like a misunderstood feminist. In an interview with the New York Post earlier this year, for example, Lara gushed: 'Donald Trump helped me get to where I am today. And he's a constant champion for women with whom he surrounds himself.' Donald 'cares about whether or not you are going to be able to perform a job to your best ability', Lara added. 'It's something I appreciate as a woman because I never want someone to give me a job because of my gender.' But if someone gives her a job because of who she is related to? Well, that's a completely different story. The Australian-born Nick Adams once tweeted: 'I go to Hooters. I eat rare steaks. I lift extremely heavy weights. I read the Bible every night. I am pursued by copious amounts of women.' He also wrote a book called Alpha Kings, which promises to 'show the young men of America what it means to be a true alpha male in today's hyper-feminized world'. If you fancy a fast track to a cushy ambassador gig one day, then it would seem your best bet is donating to the president or going the Adams route and being a manosphere influencer who has tweeted about Hooters more than 500 times in four years. A new study has found that a lot of vulnerable women are not getting the postpartum help they need. The Guardian reports that many of the women who died during pregnancy or within a year of giving birth, and were in touch with children's social care services, came from 'backgrounds of trauma and abuse, and yet despite their efforts to keep up with demanding appointment schedules, they often face scrutiny and judgment rather than receiving support for the issues they are facing'. This comes after a ProPublica and CBS News investigation found tens of millions of taxpayer dollars had been funneled into the program, which aimed to discourage people from terminating pregnancies. Aboulela's work 'is marked by a commitment to make the lives and decisions of Muslim women central to her fiction, and to examine their struggles and pleasures with dignity', said the novelist Nadifa Mohamed. Mohammadi, who was awarded the 2023 Nobel peace prize for her fight against the oppression of women in Iran, says she has been threatened with 'physical elimination by agents of the [Iranian] regime'. Headlines like this are routine now; the UN human rights office said on Friday that at least 798 people have been killed while trying to receive food aid in Gaza since the end of May. It seems clear that daily massacres in Gaza – along with settler violence and ethnic cleansing in the West Bank – will continue until every Palestinian is dead or forced to leave the region. Meanwhile, a lot of western companies are getting very rich from the genocide. And the likes of the senators Amy Klobuchar and Cory Booker, who talks a big talk about human rights, cozied up to the accused war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu this week in Washington. Congrats to the pair! One day I will write a 20,000-word thesis about the heterosexual reality-TV-to-queerness pipeline. There are a surprisingly large number of Bachelor stars who have come out after appearing on the franchise. Hippo birthday to the internet sensation and 'the people's pygmy princess' Moo Deng. The chaotic pygmy hippo turned one on Thursday and celebrated with a fruit cake and crowds of adoring fans. She also devoured an enormous tropical fruit platter, making quite the hippopota-mess. Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist

Labour must stand firm and resist trade union pressure
Labour must stand firm and resist trade union pressure

The Independent

time15 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Labour must stand firm and resist trade union pressure

The government clashed twice with trade unions in the past week and demonstrated its independence from the movement from which the Labour Party arose but to which it must never be beholden. Activists attending the 'policy' conference of Unite, the trade union, voted to suspend Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, from membership of the union, because they blame her for failing to settle the Birmingham bins dispute. By seeking to use the leverage of a personal attack, they undermined their comrades' cause. Ms Rayner is a proud trade unionist who owes her start in politics to the success she made of her role as a Unison union representative of care workers. Her Unite membership was a paper one, and she says she had already given it up. She was rightly disdainful of Unite's pettiness and the Birmingham dispute is probably further from resolution as a result. If the case against the workforce changes in Birmingham is as strong as Sharon Graham, the general secretary of Unite, says it is, it should not need the attempted intimidation of government ministers to fight it. Meanwhile, Ms Rayner's cabinet colleague Wes Streeting, the health secretary, is engaged in a different disagreement with another trade union, and one of national significance. He settled the dispute with junior hospital doctors, now called resident doctors, when Labour took office last year. The doctors secured a bigger pay rise than other public sector employees. It was a generous deal, which The Independent criticised because it did not include any commitment on the part of doctors to more efficient ways of working. Doctors could look forward to several years of favourable treatment, by which their pay would continue to catch up after the real-terms decline of the Conservative years. Instead, the British Medical Association has balloted its members on strike action in pursuit of a 'non-negotiable' demand for a 29 per cent pay rise. In that ballot an overwhelming majority of those voting supported strikes, but the strike option still failed to secure the support of a majority of those entitled to vote. As a result, public opinion is opposed to the strikes, in contrast to last year's dispute when the doctors' case was supported. Alan Johnson, the former health secretary and a former union leader himself, tells The Independent: 'This has all the signs of the BMA leading their troops into a battle they can't win – nor should they, given that government has honoured the pay review recommendations in full having settled last year's dispute immediately on taking office.' Mr Johnson is right when he says: 'This is a battle Wes Streeting has to win.' The Independent is not anti-union, despite the circumstances of its birth in the 1980s, which was enabled by the breaking of the power of the print unions in the newspaper industry. We believe that unions have a valuable role in supporting and defending their members. We have our reservations about some of the measures in Ms Rayner's Employment Rights Bill, and think it was right to postpone implementation of some of the most contentious of them until at least 2027. But there is nothing wrong with unions seeking to influence that legislation and calling on the common bonds of history to persuade Labour ministers of their arguments. But in the end, ministers must decide. They can take account of representations made by trade unions, but they should not be bullied, either by personal gestures or by industrial action. Ms Rayner and Mr Streeting must stand firm.

EXCLUSIVE SNP 'hypocrisy' row deepens as Scottish Government investment quango hands £18m in grants to arms firms
EXCLUSIVE SNP 'hypocrisy' row deepens as Scottish Government investment quango hands £18m in grants to arms firms

Daily Mail​

time18 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE SNP 'hypocrisy' row deepens as Scottish Government investment quango hands £18m in grants to arms firms

An SNP quango has handed out £18.4 million to defence firms in the past five years, despite ministers claiming the Scottish Government does not fund companies involved in munitions. In a move which will deepen a cross-border row over the SNP approach to defence spending, Scottish Enterprise has injected vast amounts of cash into companies which produce military equipment since 2020. The figures have sparked accusations that First Minister John Swinney and his Cabinet are playing 'student politics' and 'flip-flopping' to the detriment of the industry in Scotland. The SNP government is embroiled in a major row over its refusal to support a Rolls-Royce welding centre on the Clyde as it was linked to a Royal Navy 'attack submarine'. It has repeatedly said public money should not be spent on military equipment and firms involved in 'munitions'. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer branded the decision not to fund the centre 'staggering' and Defence Secretary John Healey said he could 'hardly believe' a Nationalist government would stand in the way of skills development in Scotland. The conflict deepened last week when ministers were accused of 'hypocrisy' for welcoming a new contract to help build a Royal Navy warship awarded to its embattled state-owned shipyard. Now, in response to a parliamentary question from Scottish Labour deputy leader Jackie Baillie, Scottish Enterprise has admitted that it spent £18.4 million on a number of defence projects. These include grants handed to firms such as BAE Systems, which makes artillery and tank munitions. Specific projects funded were for upskilling of workers to build naval ships on the Clyde. Meanwhile, another grant was handed to Thales UK – which makes complex weapons systems including a high velocity missile used by the British Army and the Royal Marines – for a 'civilian surveillance' and security project. Another company given funding to 'design, test and optimise advanced manufacturing processes' was Chemring Energetics UK Ltd, which sells explosives and detonating cords. Ms Baillie said: 'These figures expose the SNP's utter hypocrisy. It is right that we support Scotland's defence industry and the high-skilled jobs it provides, but the SNP's inconsistent flip-flopping does the industry no favours. 'The SNP needs to ditch the student politics and admit its ban on munitions funding is incoherent and anti-jobs.' Scottish Enterprise said it 'aims to develop good working relationships with many sectors and industries,' adding: 'That includes those operating in the defence sector, which employs tens of thousands of people.' Including a grant to BAE Systems in June worth £9 million, Scottish Enterprise gave £18,463,585 to defence companies in the past five years. A Scottish Government spokesman said: 'We recognise the importance of the aerospace, defence and shipbuilding sectors, which is why we have provided over £90 million in funding to companies operating in these sectors since 2006/07. 'Most recently, the Deputy First Minister [Kate Forbes] welcomed a £9 million Scottish Enterprise grant to BAE Systems to support a training and skills academy. 'Scottish Enterprise engagement and funding is only provided to support specific projects at Scottish sites and does not include assistance for projects related to the manufacture of munitions.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store