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Virginia GOP Paid $80K to Far-Right Homeschoolers' Group

In September, we reported that Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Ken Cuccinelli had called in religious-right reinforcements (link is external) in the form of Generation Joshua, a branch of the Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA) that sends homeschoolers to campaign(link is external) on behalf of conservative candidates across the country.

It turns out there was something in it for the homeschoolers’ group other than working to rid Virginia of the scourges of “abortion, homosexuality, and moral relativism.” Roll Call’s Political Money Line reports that the week before the election, the Republican Party of Virginia disbursed $79,500 to the HSLDA’s federal PAC (link is external) .

This is a big windfall for a group that in the 2012 election cycle took in just $46,000 and spent $32,000(link is external) supporting a handful of right-wing candidates(link is external) including Todd Akin and Michele Bachmann.

HSLDA is run by Michael Farris, who is also the founder and president of Patrick Henry College, a religious-right institution intended to prepare homeschoolers for leadership positions (link is external) in the conservative movement. Generation Joshua is a parallel effort that has marshalled homeschooled children to campaign on behalf of far-right candidates including Bachmann(link is external) and Cuccinelli.

In September, we noted some of Farris and HSLDA’s greatest hits(link is external):

Generation Joshua’s William Estrada said the youth group deserves credit(link is external) for swaying former Hawaii Gov. Linda Lingle’s decision to veto a civil unions law(link is external) and Farris successfully led the opposition(link is external) to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

Last December, Farris gained publicity for his drive to make sure that no gay students (link is external) are attending Patrick Henry College. A Patrick Henry professor during the college's annual “Faith and Reason” lecture criticized(link is external) the government for prosecuting rape, sexual harassment, child abuse and domestic violence cases.

Just this month, Farris testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to promote the conspiracy theory(link is external) that the U.S. ratifying the U.N Convention on the Rights of Persons With Disabilities would in fact lead to the banning of homeschooling.