I’ve been following Bush’s faith-based initiative since it was unveiled five years ago, and it never ceases to amaze me how it manages to get worse over time. It was bad enough when the president was ignoring the separation of church and state, and funding religions against the will of taxpayers, and putting families in need in a position of receiving government-sponsored proselytizing, and subsidizing religion-based employment discrimination.
But turning the entire faith-based initiative into a slush fund to reward his conservative allies is probably low.
For years, conservatives have complained about what they saw as the liberal tilt of federal grant money. Taxpayer funds went to abortion rights groups such as Planned Parenthood to promote birth control, and groups closely aligned with the AFL-CIO got Labor Department grants to run worker-training programs.
In the Bush administration, conservatives are discovering that turnabout is fair play: Millions of dollars in taxpayer funds have flowed to groups that support President Bush’s agenda on abortion and other social issues.
Under the auspices of its religion-based initiatives and other federal programs, the administration has funneled at least $157 million in grants to organizations run by political and ideological allies, according to federal grant documents and interviews.
Literally hundreds of anti-abortion centers have seen their budgets, in some cases, triple in size, thanks to an infusion of tax dollars. Abstinence-only programs have seen the same trend. The scales have apparently tipped in the direction of those who have been “active Republicans and influential supporters of Bush’s presidential campaigns.”
Rep. Chet Edwards (D-Tex.) told the WaPo, “I believe ultimately this will be seen as one of the largest patronage programs in American history.”
When conservative Republicans agree with this assessment, you know Bush’s program has gone awry.
Rep. Mark Edward Souder (R-Ind.), chairman of the Government Reform subcommittee on criminal justice, drug policy and human resources, and a long-time proponent of Bush’s faith-based initiative, criticized the effort, saying it “has gone political.”
“Quite frankly, part of the reason it went political is because we can’t sell it unless we can show Republicans a political advantage to it, because it’s not our base,” he said, referring to the fact that many of those receiving social services are Democratic voters.
That’s quite an admission. As Souder, a conservative Republican, sees it, the faith-based initiative had to start rewarding those on the right because, if the aid simply went to worthy causes, the GOP would reject it. As usual, it’s all about what officials can do for the Republican “base.”
Shameless.