Pro-Family Group Urges Obama to Drop Universal Preschool Push
President Obama proposed universal preschool for all children in the U.S. The Family Research Council opposes the initiative.
“President Obama has again endorsed a government solution to a spiritual and familial problem. President Obama and his big government supporters think that starting school at a younger age will help solve society’s problems. But a study of the federal preschool program Head Start shows that for all the money spent on the program it had little effect on educational outcomes after preschool concluded,” says Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Coucil (FRC).
FRC’s Drs. Henry Potrykus and Pat Fagan have found that family intactness “is roughly as important as high school education and more important than college education in influencing outcomes of public policy interest.”
“Children need parental involvement and attention. They need strong families. What a four-year-old needs more than anything is a loving, secure home with a mom and dad who love each other. There is no better way to start a young life. We cannot have secure, well-prepared, confident children if we continue to sustain a culture where no-fault divorce, cohabitation and out-of-wedlock births are the norm,” Perkins says.
“We urge the president and his allies to instead focus on another line from the State of the Union address. President Obama said he planned to use tax credits to ‘encourage fatherhood–because what makes you a man isn’t the ability to conceive a child; it’s having the courage to raise one.’ We completely agree. That’s the sort of policy proposal that Americans of all political colors can get behind, and we urge the president to put his time and energy into promoting family formation, not further deficit spending.”
FRC’s Marriage & Religion Research Institute just released its third annual “Index of Family Belonging and Rejection,” which shows the breakdown of the family in each state and the 45 largest U.S. cities.