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The Family Leader

Focus Social conservative political advocacy
Location
Area served
Iowa
Key people
Bob Vander Plaats (President & CEO)
Chuck Hurley (President, Iowa Family Policy Center)
Slogan Strengthening Families
Website http://www.thefamilyleader.com

The Family Leader (stylized The FAMiLY LEADER) is an American social conservative political organization in Iowa. The Family Leader is an umbrella group comprising the The Family Leader Foundation, Marriage Matters, Iowa Family PAC, and Iowans for Freedom. The Family Leader is loosely affiliated with the national social conservative organization Focus on the Family. According to its website, The Family Leader "provides a consistent, courageous voice in the churches, in the legislature, in the media, in the courtroom, in the public square…always standing for God’s truth."

Through the new group, the organization planned to play a more influential role in the 2012 Iowa caucus campaigns than in 2008, including offering an endorsement for the first time.

In mid-2011, The Family Leader gained national recognition for its pledge, "The Marriage Vow: A Declaration of Dependence upon MARRIAGE and FAMILY", which it asked 2012 presidential hopefuls to sign. Vander Plaats himself also gained recognition, being referred to in one news post as a "kingmaker."The Hill claimed Vander Plaats' endorsement as one of the top 10 coveted endorsements for Republicans running for president.

Though the pledge was signed very quickly by candidate Michele Bachmann, others were not so quick to sign or support it. Former Iowa State Senator Jeff Angelo, a Republican, said: "This pledge is an attempt to shut down dialogue between voters and the people vying to represent them.". Presidential hopeful Mitt Romney called the pledge "undignified and inappropriate." Romney's campaign later clarified that he would not sign because language in the pledge made the assertion that African American children born into slavery in 1860 were better off than children raised today. He was not the only one to take issue with this language. The "slavery portion" of the pledge was soon removed.

Some also opposed the pledge because of its strong anti-pornography stance and the fact that it says being homosexual is a choice.

After the controversies with the pledge, House Speaker Pro-Tem Jeff Kaufmann, said the pledge has "ridiculous implications," questioned Vander Plaats' integrity, and said that his "political credibility is waning to the point of no impact."


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