 
 
 
 On September 2, 1939, the House of Commons debated the British  government’s response to the German invasion of Poland the previous day. The ruling Conservative Party was badly divided between those demanding that Britain fulfill its obligations to Poland and those addicted to  the habits of appeasement. “Party loyalty” was being invoked to drown  out Conservative opposition to Conservative prime minister Neville  Chamberlain when the deputy leader of the opposition Labour Party,  Arthur Greenwood, rose to speak. Then, from the Tory back benches, came  the voice of an anti-appeasement Conservative, Leo Amery, who cried,  “Speak for England, Arthur!”
  
 Who speaks for country and  principle, not just for faction or party? It’s a perennial question. I  was reminded of it, and of Leo Amery, when my friend, Senator Henry M.  Jackson, died in 1983, and one of his aides said, “We’ve just lost the  last adult in the Senate.” When I asked what that meant, he replied,  “There was only one man here who, when a crisis was at hand and the  country was at risk, had the personal authority to say, in effect,  ‘Close the door; let’s get serious and get this settled.’” That’s what  the death of Scoop Jackson meant: the last reference point had left the  scene. (And if you want a sense of that aide’s prescience, look at the  U.S. Senate today.)
  
 Legislative bodies with contending factions  and ideas need that kind of leadership: they need someone—or,  preferably, several someones—with the authority to speak for the common  good and get others to think outside the narrow confines of their own  concerns and interests. And so (if I may stretch an analogy just a bit)  do bishops conferences.
  
 The death of Cardinal Francis George on  April 17 opened a breach in the life and work of the United States  Conference of Catholic Bishops. Since Cardinal John O’Connor’s death in  2000, Cardinal George played the role championed by Leo Amery and  embodied by Scoop Jackson in another sphere of action: Cardinal George  was the man with the authority, in this case, to “speak for the Church,” and to get his brother bishops to bracket their differences and act as  one for the good of the Church. He did it quietly, but he also did it  effectively. And he could do it because of who he was: his character and insight made him the reference point when things were very serious.
  
 When Francis George was appointed archbishop of Chicago, an auxiliary bishop who will remain nameless said, “Oh no, he’s the one who gets up at the  meetings and uses those words the bishops don’t understand.” Well, His  Nameless (and now deceased) Excellency may not have understood, but  others did. And those who didn’t necessarily have the same breadth of  learning and culture as Francis George nonetheless followed his lead  because they knew him as a man of erudition and humility who thought  things through, who had the courage to follow his convictions, and who  could be trusted to speak for the Church, not just for his point of view or his “party.”
  
 It was immensely important that the bishops  elected Cardinal George their conference president in 2007. For it was  his leadership that created the broad consensus about the Catholic  future in America that led to the election of Cardinal Timothy Dolan as  conference president in 2010—and that made possible the bishops’  stalwart defense of religious freedom in the face of an administration  determined to bend the Church and its work of healing, educating and  empowering the poor to the government’s will.
  
 That contest is by no means over, for the modern state—whoever is in charge—seems to have  an irresistible urge to expand its reach, shrinking the sphere of civil  society in the process. This tendency is a direct challenge to the core  Catholic social doctrine principle of subsidiarity. And it must be  resisted, even as the Church works to marry subsidiarity to solidarity  with the weakest among us. 
  
 So: who will now “speak for the Church”? 
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