Everything about The Family First Party totally explained
The
Family First Party is a
political party in
Australia. Its policies emphasise
socially conservative family values.
The party was founded in
South Australia in time to contest the
2002 state elections, when former
Assemblies of God pastor
Dr Andrew Evans became its first
MLC, winning a seat in the
South Australian Legislative Council. A second MLC, pharmaceutical executive
Dennis Hood, was elected at the
2006 South Australian election.
In the
October 2004 federal election it contested seats all over Australia, generally exchanging
preferences with
Liberal candidates (but in some seats exchanging preferences with the
Australian Labor Party). At that election the party was successful in electing their first and at present only federal politician
Steve Fielding,
Senator for
Victoria. No candidates were elected at the
2007 federal election, however Fielding will share the
balance of power in the Senate with independent
Nick Xenophon and the five
Australian Greens once the new Senate meets on 1 July 2008.
Although officially
secular and eschewing religious labels, many of its candidates and members are from
conservative Christian backgrounds.
Structure
Family First is incorporated as a limited liability company overseen by a Board of Directors. A National Conference occurs at least once every two years for policy formulation and to endorse candidates. Federal and State branches have Annual General Meetings that are open to all members.
Political relations
Family First and the
Australian Greens are often at odds, with Family First often referring to the Greens as "extreme" in their media statements. The two parties are in competition for Senate preferences, particularly from the
Labor Party, and ideologically opposed on many issues. In the 2006 Victorian election, Family First's limited television advertising campaign specifically singled out the Greens for criticism .
Relations between Family First and
Fred Nile's Christian Democratic Party (Australia) are strained by the need to compete for the same group of voters and to secure Senate preferences, particularly from the
Liberal Party of Australia.
Election Results
2002 South Australian Election
The first election Family First contested was the
2002 South Australian Election.
Dr Andrew Evans received a primary vote of 4.02%
(External Link
) which, with preferences from other parties, was sufficient to get him elected to one of the 11 seats available in the
South Australian Legislative Council.
2004 Federal Election
The party agreed to share House of Representatives preferences with the
Liberal-
National Coalition at the
2004 election (External Link
) (with some exceptions discussed below).
Family First did better than expected at the election, picking up 1.76 percent of the vote nationally, and outpolling the
Australian Democrats by more than 40,000 votes. This resulted in an unexpected victory in
Victoria, where candidate
Steve Fielding was elected on preferences to the Federal Senate, despite receiving significantly fewer primary votes (56,376 or 1.88% Group Totals) than
The Greens'
David Risstrom (263,551 or 8.80% Group Totals).
The party also came close to picking up other Senate seats in
Tasmania (largely due to surplus Liberal votes, because Liberal polled over three quotas but only stood three candidates) and in
South Australia where the then party leader
Andrea Mason narrowly missed out (polling 3.98% and receiving Liberal preferences). Their preferences also assisted the performance of the governing Liberal Party in several House of Representatives seats, such as in the highly marginal South Australian seat of
Makin.
State Elections since 2004
In the 2005 Western Australian Election, Family First polled just over 2% in the Legislative Council (although only contesting 5 of 6 seats)
(External Link
). Interestingly, in 2005, the Liberal member for Ningaloo, Rod Sweetman, and
Alan Cadby (who was defeated in Liberal preselection for a further term) offered to serve out their parliamentary terms as a Family First members - an offer which was rejected by Family First due to their both supporting a bill for decriminalisation of abortion in 1998.
(External Link
)
In the
2006 South Australian election, Family First's vote increased to 4.98% in the Legislative Council,
(External Link
) and a second Member of the Legislative Council was elected - former pharmaceutical executive
Dennis Hood. In several rural and outer metropolitan seats, Family First's vote approached 10% - and in the seat of Kavel,
Tom Playford achieved a vote of 15.7%.
(External Link
) In the Legislative Council, Family First shares the
balance of power with the other minor parties and independents.
The 2006 Queensland State Election saw Family First receive a primary vote of 7% in contested seats (many seats were not contested), with a high of 14.5% and several other seats posting results of 10%
(External Link
) (External Link
). Queensland doesn't have an Upper House, and these results were insufficient for any candidates to be elected.
The 2006 Victorian State Election saw Family First's vote increase from 1.9% to 4.27% of first preferences
(External Link
), however no candidates were elected.
2007 Federal Election
Family First contested the
2007 federal election, in particular seeking to increase its Senate representation. Nationwide, the party received 1.62 percent of the primary vote in the Senate, and 1.99 percent in the House of Representatives, both down slightly on the 2004 result. In Victoria however, both the
lower and
upper house vote increased by 0.64 percent, to 2.52 and 3.02 percent respectively. No Family First candidates were elected. Sitting Senator Steve Fielding's term doesn't expire until 2011.
Before the 2007 Elections in Australia,
Fred Nile criticized Family First for giving preferences (in some states) to the
Liberty and Democracy Party, a
libertarian political party that as one of its policies wants to legalize recreational drug use, stating "They gave their preferences to the enemy, the anti-Christian party." This was suggested as a reason for their poor election result. Ironically, Fred Nile's own party had also preferenced the Liberty and Democracy Party before any other major party in the Senate.
Religious affiliation
Family First co-founder Pastor
Andrew Evans was the General Superintendent of the
Assemblies of God in Australia for twenty years. In the 2002 South Australian election and the 2004 Federal Election, a number of Family First candidates were church members. In
New South Wales, 11 of their 23 candidates for the
2004 federal election were from an Assemblies of God church, the Hawkesbury Church in
Windsor
South Australian Family First Member of the Legislative Council
Dennis Hood, the party's state parliamentary leader, is a member of the
Rostrevor Baptist Church. When
Sunday Mail columnist
Peter Goers stated that Hood was an anti-evolution
Creationist, Hood didn't deny this in his response, while he did attempt to set the record straight on issues of policy.
Family First's preferencing agreement with the
Coalition (Australia) in the 2004 federal election led
Barnaby Joyce, the
National senate candidate for Queensland, to publicly slam the party the day before the election, calling them "the lunatic Right", and stating that "these are not the sort of people you do preference deals with". Joyce's comments came in response to a pamphlet published by one of the party's Victorian Senate candidates,
Danny Nalliah who in his capacity as a church pastor had criticised other religions and homosexuality.
In September 2004, party leader
Andrea Mason said that Family First isn't a Christian party and Family First Federal Secretary Dr Matt Burnet issued a press release stating:
"The party isn't a church party or an Assembly of God party, nor is it funded by AOG churches. It does see itself as socially conservative, with Family Values based on Christian ethics. Like any main-stream party we don't have on record the religious affiliations of any of our members. The Board of Reference in South Australia includes business-people, members of the medical profession, as well as ministers and people from Catholic, Baptist, Lutheran, Uniting and other church groups. The rapid national growth of the party leading into this election and the late decision to contest in all seats possible, has meant that in some states there are candidates, with strong family values, who have been introduced to the party through the personal relationships they've from their involvement in community/church networks".
However, news reportage continued to associate the party with Assemblies of God, as did concerned church member Nathan Zamprogno, who commented publicly about the intersection of politics and the church.
Policies
Abortion
According to their web site, Family First say that that'll "seek to promote recognition and valuing of the inherent dignity of each human being from conception. In this context, Family First is opposed to the medical treatment procedure of abortion."
Asylum seekers
Family First contends that it has a 'compassionate' stance towards asylum seekers, supporting fast on-shore processing. In what would have been a deciding vote, Federal leader
Steve Fielding opposed the Liberal Government to ensure that asylum seekers to Australia are not processed in overseas detention facilities. This resulted in the government not proceeding with the proposed legislation
Drugs
Family First oppose
harm reduction as a primary strategy for combating drug abuse, instead favouring prevention, zero tolerance,
rehabilitation, and avoidance.
Environment
Family First's environment and resources policy states that "Family First is committed to the environment as essential to ensuring the health and happiness of future generations of families".
In the South Australian parliament, Family First MPs have taken outspoken positions on environmental topics such as desalination schemes and the Murray-Darling Basin. Family First MPs also successfully lobbied the government to include an interim 2020 greenhouse reduction target in Climate Change legislation.
In the
2006 Victorian election, Family First advocated several positions that that the
Australian Conservation Foundation viewed as non-environmental. These positions included the construction of new dams to increase water supplies, arguing for a reduction in fuel taxes, arguing against cuts to existing logging agreements, and specifically supporting continued access to public lands for "recreational fishing, shooting and hunting" .
Euthanasia
Family First is opposed to
euthanasia, holding the view that "the duty of health carers is to promote health, relieve suffering and safeguard life". Instead, they favour
palliative care.
Sexuality
Family First opposes
LGBT adoption, IVF treatment for
lesbians, and opposes
same-sex marriage and
civil unions, stating their declaration of marriage as "a union of a man and a woman". Family First's only official
LGBT rights-related policy is that "all co-dependents shouldn't be discriminated against – whether Homosexual or not".
In the
2004 federal election the party directed preferences to the Coalition ahead of Labor except in the seats of
Brisbane and
Leichhardt. The party's lead senate candidate in Queensland, John Lewis indicated that the reason was the public advocacy on gay issues of the Liberal candidates for those seats.
In 2006, the two SA Family First MLCs voted against the Statutes Amendment (Domestic Partners) Bill.
Indigenous Australians
Family First was the first party in Australia to nominate an Aboriginal woman, lawyer
Andrea Mason, as party President. The party did hope to attract a large Aboriginal vote in South Australia where Andrea Mason was touted as possibly the first Aboriginal woman to be elected to parliament.
Although Family First's
policy on indigenous Australians
doesn't specifically address the
Stolen Generation, Mason has said: "I think there's a cobweb, there's a veil over our country... in terms of this unresolved issue... I think that there will be a significant change in the way we perceive ourselves and our relationships with each other when there's an apology made to the stolen generations".
Industrial relations
Family First is opposed to some aspects of the Howard government's
Australian Workplace Agreement measures, campaigning against the measures in the Federal Senate, and voting against the 2005
WorkChoices legislation. In his
Maiden Speech, Senator
Steve Fielding argued for a fairer work / rest / and 'family time' or leisure balance in opposing the measures.
Pornography
Family First's
internet pornography policy calls for a "Mandatory
Filtering Scheme at the ISP Server Level" as a matter of child protection.
"It is a national travesty that's so easily fixed if the Government and the opposition would exercise their moral will and pass legislation that requires Internet Service Providers (ISP's) to provide a compulsory filtering of pornography on the Internet... Adults can elect to opt out, but we're putting ISP's on
notice that greater diligence is required", said Andrea Mason in a media release on Wednesday, 25 August 2004.
War in Iraq
Family First believes that the
2003 invasion of Iraq was wrong because diplomatic avenues hadn't been exhausted, but that having participated in that invasion Australia is now obliged to protect Iraqis and Australians in Iraq through a military presence.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Family First Party'.
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