Abortion In 1990, the USCCB hired the public relations firm
Hill & Knowlton in New York City to launch a campaign to persuade Catholics and non-Catholics to oppose the
Abortion-rights movement. This was part of a persuasive effect to educate the public on abortion as opposed to demonstrations at women's health clinics. In the November 2023 assembly, the bishops again stated that abortion was a greater threat to life than gun violence, racism,
climate change and inequality in health care and was the preeminent priority of the American Catholic Church.
Contraception In March 2012, regarding the
contraception mandate issued as a regulation under the 2010
Affordable Care Act, which required that employers who do not support contraception but are not religious institutions
per se must cover contraception via their
employer-sponsored health insurance. USCCB decided to "continue its 'vigorous opposition to this unjust and illegal mandate'".
Ecumenicism As of 2021, the USCCB has been in ecumenical discussion with the
Pentecostal/Charismatic Churches of North America (PCCNA), as well as discussing the possibility of future theological dialogue between Pentecostalism and Catholicism. The USCCB is a member of
Christian Churches Together, an interdenominational fellowship of Christian denominations and organizations in the United States.
Religious liberty The USCCB in 2009 issued the revised
Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services. These directives were first issued in 1971. The main focus of these revisions was guidance for Catholic health care institutions in dealing with governments and non-Catholic organizations. It was sued by the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) on the grounds that the directive in some cases caused doctors to refuse treatment of women in an emergency medical situation. From 2012 to 2018, the USCCB promoted
Fortnight for Freedom, a campaign to protest government activities that the USCCB viewed as impinging on
religious liberty. The USCCB replaced it in 2018 with Religious Liberty Week.
Gun violence The USCCB filed an
amicus brief in the 2024
US Supreme Court case of
United States v. Rahimi. The USCCB argued that protecting the innocent "is a proper consideration" when regulating firearms: "As the Church teaches, and this Nation's historical traditions demonstrate, the right to bear arms is not an unqualified license that must leave vulnerable family members to live in fear. Abused victims are precisely the people whom a just government is tasked with protecting. The Second Amendment does not stand as a barrier to their safety." The USCCB in September 2017 condemned the
Trump administration's cancellation of the
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. DACA had allowed nearly 800,000 young people who arrived in the United States as children of undocumented immigrants to apply for protection from deportation. At the 2018 USCCB meeting in
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, President Cardinal
Daniel DiNardo criticized the Trump administration's policies of
family separation of undocumented immigrants and the denial of
asylum in the United States to women fleeing
domestic violence in their home country. In November 2025, the USCCB issued their first "special pastoral message" in twelve years, expressing solidarity with immigrants and opposition to what they called the "indiscriminate mass deportation"
policies of the second Trump administration. In the statement, the Bishops say:We are disturbed when we see among our people a climate of fear and anxiety around questions of profiling and immigration enforcement. We are saddened by the state of contemporary debate and the vilification of immigrants. We are concerned about the conditions in detention centers and the lack of access to pastoral care. We lament that some immigrants in the United States have arbitrarily lost their legal status.The bishops voted overwhelmingly in favor of passing the immigration statement, with 216 voting yes, 5 against and 3 abstaining.In December 2023, the USCCB clarified
Pope Francis' recent remarks on the blessing of
same-sex couples and unmarried couples. They said that a priest could bless them, but not in the context of validating their union as a marriage.
Politics In 2020, some conservative American bishops complained to Gómez after he congratulated US Senator
Joe Biden, a Catholic, on his election as president of the United States. In response, Gómez formed a working group to address the "confusion" that could be caused by Catholic politicians who support policies that contravene Catholic teaching. On January 20, 2021,
inauguration day in the United States, Gómez sent Biden a congratulatory letter. The letter said that Gómez was "praying that God grant him wisdom and courage to lead this great nation and that God help him to meet the tests of these times. " However, Gómez also stated that some of Biden's policies,"...would advance moral evils and threaten human life and dignity, most seriously in the areas of abortion, contraception, marriage, and gender. Of deep concern is the liberty of the Church and the freedom of believers to live according to their consciences."Several bishops, including Cardinal
Blase J. Cupich of Chicago, objected to the Gómez letter. Cupich said that individuals within the USCCB drafted the Biden letter without first consulting with the Administrative Committee. He described the incident as an "institutional failure" of the USCCB; the bishops should have been allowed to approve the Biden letter first. In what
America magazine called a "rare rebuke", Cupich released two statements, one of which said, "Today, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops issued an ill-considered statement on the day of President Biden's inauguration. Aside from the fact that there is seemingly no precedent for doing so, the statement, critical of President Biden, came as a surprise to many bishops, who received it just hours before it was released." He further stated that any new USCCB provision had to respect the rights of individual bishops in their diocese and the prerogatives of the Vatican. In April 2021, the Gómez working group announced that it was drafting a new document on communion.
Racism During the 2020
protests over the murder of
George Floyd by police in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, Archbishop
José Horacio Gómez, the USCCB president, issued a statement condemning Floyd's death. He cited Reverend
Martin Luther King Jr.'s words that "riots are the language of the unheard".
Israeli–Palestinian conflict Following the official political stance of the Vatican, the USCCB endorses a
two-state solution to the
Israeli–Palestinian conflict, which it describes as "a secure and recognized
Israel living in peace alongside a viable and independent
Palestine." On 11 December 2024, during the ongoing
Gaza war, the USCCB and the
American Jewish Committee (AJC) published a joint document that condemned
antisemitism and
anti-Zionism. It states that calling Zionism inherently racist is antisemitic; and that allegations about
Zionism being settler-colonialism, or having as its goal
the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, are antisemitic and false. Later on 25 March,
Kairos Palestine, an organization led by Catholic Patriarch Emeritus
Michel Sabbah and composed of Catholic,
Orthodox, and
Protestant Palestinians, sent a letter to the USCCB objecting to the document. Kairos Palestine particularly condemned the document's characterization of anti-Israel sentiment as antisemitic, stated that it ignored "overwhelming evidence" of the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, and accused the USCCB of alienating
Palestinian Christians. The Catholic organization Pax Christi USA issued a statement backing Kairos Palestine. Archbishop Broglio's response to the letter on 31 March explained that the USCCB partnered with the AJC to combat rising antisemitism, but appeared to not directly respond to the specific objections of Kairos Palestine. On 14 April, Kairos Palestine sent another letter to the USCCB which called Broglio's response "unacceptable", accused the USCCB of sharing responsibility for the plight of Palestinians, and condemned the conflation of the Palestinian cause with antisemitism as "theologically and morally wrong". ==Funding==