Parnell takes 'state business' to Focus on the Family
Jill Burke, Joshua Saul |
Jun 08, 2010
Gov. Sean Parnell was on his way home Tuesday night from Colorado, where, according to a spokeswoman, he traveled on state business to attend meetings with the evangelical Christian group Focus on the Family. Specific details have yet to be released about the trip that raised eyebrows among some of Parnell's critics, including a few who hope to unseat him this year. Parnell spokeswoman Sharon Leighow said topics discussed during the daylong session in Colorado included foster care and the governor's domestic violence and sexual assault initiative. Leighow confirmed the trip was considered state business -- the state paid for the travel and Parnell was accompanied by a state employee, Cindy Sims, director of the governor's Anchorage office -- but she did not have immediate access to the full agenda or the topics covered and she did not know whether the meetings were hosted by Focus of the Family, its political action arm, CitizenLink (which until recently was called Focus on the Family Action), or another related organization. Leighow was also not able to offer specifics about the meetings -- size, scope or other attendees -- but she expected to have more information following the governor's return to Juneau. Founded in 1977 by psychologist James Dobson, Focus on the Family describes itself as "a global Christian ministry dedicated to helping families thrive." The organization's "guiding principles" include "the permanence of marriage," "the preeminance of evangelism," and "the sanctity of human life." CitizenLink urges members to take action in support of abstinence-only education, promotes the theory that homosexuality is a sin that can be "overcome," and is unequivocally opposed to physician-assisted suicide, embryonic stem cell research and abortion. The meetings with Focus on the Family came just days after Parnell vetoed a $3 million expansion of a public health care program that serves low-income women and children. Thursday, Parnell revealed he was vetoing funding in the new state budget intended to expand Denali Kid Care because abortion is among the services covered by the program. Critics said the move was heavy-handed and hurt real people in need of real care -- an additional 1,200 to 1,300 children and 218 pregnant women who would, as a result of the increased funding, have been able to gain access to medical coverage. Critics accused Parnell, who faces several primary challengers in his run for a full term this year, of playing politics; however, the governor said he was guided by his conscience. The timing wasn't lost on state Sen. Hollis French, who hadn't heard anything about the governor's trip before being reached for comment. "I wish he'd spent the last two days speaking to the 1,200 children who no longer have access to basic medical care because of his veto," French, a candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, said. "That's where his attention should be focused -- on providing health care to them instead of traveling out of state." Sen. Bettye Davis, also a Democrat, hadn't heard about the trip either, but said it sounded like an attempt to build credibility among social conservatives -- the same reaction she had to the veto.
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