Preaching the GOP gospel?
Church & State, Sep 2003 by Conn, Joseph L
Using His 'Faith-Based' Initiative To Try To Win Converts In The African-American Community, Bush Seeks To Make His Calling And Election Sure
Some 120 African-American clergy and other community leaders gathered in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building July 16 to hear from President George W. Bush. The message was simple: Bush wants to divert federal funds to "faith-based" social service programs such as theirs.
"My attitude," Bush insisted, "is taxpayers' money should and must fund effective programs, effective faith-based programs, so long as those services go to anybody in need.... Really what we're doing is we're signing up the armies of compassion, which already exist, and saying, 'what can we do to help you fulfill your calling and your mission?'"
Flanked by seven black clergy including the Rev. Tony Evans of Dallas and the Rev. Eugene Rivers of Boston, Bush touted a new 76-page catalog of federal grants that churches and other religious groups are eligible to apply for.
"We spend a lot of money here in Washington," Bush said, "and monies ought to be accessible to effective faith-based programs which heal people from all walks of life."
The message went down well with the president's audience. He was interrupted often by applause and the occasional amen. According to the Associated Baptist Press, as Bush was leaving the room, one man yelled, "Mr. President, four more years!"
That must have been music to the ears of Bush and his political advisers and evidence of the success of their plan to use the faith-based initiative to make inroads with African-American voters.
Bush's team has been candid about that aim. In an interview with USA Today, newly elected Republican National Committee chairman Ed Gillespie listed the faith-based scheme as one of the administration's major selling points to get more blacks to vote Republican.
"I don't expect a massive wave of party-switching among African-Americans from Democrat to Republican," Gillespie told the newspaper, "but I think there is drift there."
Bush's Washington meeting with black clergy is but the latest event designed to push that campaign along. But many critics are coming forward to challenge whether the faith-based initiative is a positive program or a sham designed to divert public attention from cuts in federal programs that help innercity blacks and others struggling with poverty, illiteracy and crime.
One such critic is Jim Myers, a writer who lives in Washington, D.C., in a predominantly African-American neighborhood that is beset with many social problems. In recent articles in Youth Today and The Washington Post, Myers exposed a shocking example of government profligacy.
According to the writer, the Bush administration and its congressional allies since 2001 have earmarked more than $3 million to the Youth Life Foundation, a faith-based outfit run by former football star Darrell Green. Of that sum, an estimated $1.3 million went to a learning center in northeast Washington that serves only 38 children.
Green's foundation and its center are aligned with Morning Star International, an association of Pentecostal churches with ministries around the world. The foundation's governing board is led by Brett Fuller, pastor of Grace Covenant Church, a Herndon, Va., congregation of which Green is a member.
Lucky participants at Green's learning center at Franklin Commons housing project get not only Bible study and prayer, but also tutoring, summer internships and sometimes private school tuition. "Mystery Trips" take these low-income children to faraway destinations including Chicago, Disney World and the Grand Canyon.
"But," says Myers, "[Green's] center is directly serving only 38 kids, in a city where 35,000 live in poverty. At a time when public spending on social services is being challenged or cut back, such generous amenities offered to one small group can't help but make you wonder about how well served all those other kids are."
The writer noted that the Bush administration is seeking a $400-million cut in the 21st Century Community Learning Centers program, the largest federal subsidy for after-school assistance. One source calculates that such a cut would eliminate services for 2,902 needy children in the District of Columbia.
That hasn't kept administration officials from using Green's program as a political backdrop and a "model" of its faith-based enterprise. Myers notes that U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige touted the center, along with Bush's education initiatives, in an appearance with Green in April 2002. Paige visited the center in May 2002 and appeared at a luncheon honoring Green in October of that year.
U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson came to the center in June 2002 to announce $30 million in grants to faith-based groups from the Compassion Capital Fund.
In January, Bush named Green chairman of the President's Council on Service and Civic Participation, and the former Redskins cornerback showed up as a guest of Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist at the State of the Union. Green also was invited to speak to the congressional Republicans' annual retreat at The Greenbrier Resort shortly afterward.
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