Clearly, TV preacher Pat Robertson, after a series of controversies stemming from imbalanced public remarks, is persona non grata in most sensible circles. More and more, the evangelical community isn’t returning his calls, and a political figure of any significance knows it would be foolish to be seen with Robertson right now.
And yet, when it comes to distributing our tax dollars, the Bush administration is still making sure Robertson is well paid.
When President Bush launched his “faith-based initiative” in 2001 to funnel federal money to religious groups, Pat Robertson was skeptical, calling the idea a “Pandora’s box” and a “narcotic” that would ensnare religious organizations in government red tape.
Those misgivings notwithstanding, the federal government has become a major source of money for Operation Blessing, Robertson’s international charity, under the Bush initiative. In two years, the group’s annual revenue from government grants has ballooned from $108,000 to $14.4 million.
There are plenty of reasons to be concerned about this funding. For one thing, the group has been investigated for making deceptive appeals. For another, Robertson’s charity discriminates in hiring — Operation Blessing does not hire non-Christians — even though it accepts public funds.
But even if we put those serious concerns aside, there’s a more basic political question the Bush administration should answer: why in the world is Bush giving $14.4 million to a crazed TV preacher’s charity?
That’s not really a rhetorical question; I’m kind of hoping someone asks Scott McClellan to explain.