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| Family First Party | |
| Current Leader: | Andrea Mason |
| Founded: | 2002 |
| Headquarters: | PO Box 1042 Campbelltown SA 5074 |
| Political ideology: | Christian-influenced conservatism |
| Holds government: | nowhere |
| Website: | Family First Party |
The Family First Party is a political party in Australia. It has close links to some Protestant churches and its policies generally mirror conservative Christian values. The party was founded in South Australia, but at the October 2004 federal election it contested seats all over Australia, and its preferences assisted the re-election of a number of Liberal candidates. The party's leader is Andrea Mason, who headed its Senate ticket in South Australia. Family First has one elected representative: Andrew Evans, a member of the South Australian Legislative Council. One Family First candidate, Steve Fielding from Victoria, won a seat in the Senate at the 20042004 is a leap year starting on Thursday (the link is to a full 2004 calendar), and has also been designated the: International Year of Rice International Year to Commemorate the Struggle against Slavery and its Abolition Elections are to be held in 73 co election; he will take his seat in July 20052005 is a common year starting on Saturday (link will take you to calendar). It has been designated: The World Year of Physics The International Year of Microcredit The International Year for Sport and Physical Education The United States Year of Foreign.
Whether Family First is a Christian party is the subject of dispute. Party leader Andrea Mason has said that "we are not a Christian party",[1] and the party certainly does not describe itself as such. However, the party draws much of its support from various Christian groups, predominantly Pentecostal ones, and it has many associations with the Assemblies of GodThe Assemblies of God is the world's largest Pentecostal Christian denomination. The Assemblies of God was founded in 1914 at Hot Springs, Arkansas. Representatives from 20 states and a few foreign countries gathered to discuss the possibility and advisab.
Party founder Andrew Evans was the General Superintendent of the Assemblies of God in Australia for twenty years [2]. In a speech to the South Australian Legislative Council he indicated belief in a religious basis for laws: "Out of his love for mankind
A large number of Family First's candidates are pastors or members of Assemblies of God churches. In New South Wales, 11 of their 23 candidates for the 2004 legislative election were from a single Assemblies of God church, the Hawkesbury Church in Windsor.
A pamphlet published by the party's Victorian Senate candidate Danny Nalliah stated that mosques and Buddhist and Hindu temples were Satan's strongholds and that people should pray for their destruction[4].
Family First's supporters typically characterise it as an essentially secular party open to all who share its values, Christian or otherwise; its detractors see it as an essentially religious party that has obfuscated its true nature and agenda in order to broaden its appeal. Regardless of which analysis is correct, Family First's declared policies and values are at the least highly compatible with those of conservative Christianity.