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Jim Talent on Families & Children
Republican Senator; previously Representative (MO-2)
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Rated 100% by the Christian Coalition: a pro-family voting record.
Talent scores 100% by the Christian Coalition on family issues
The Christian Coalition was founded in 1989 by Dr. Pat Robertson to give Christians a voice in government. We represent millions of people of faith and enable them to have a strong, unified voice in the conversation we call democracy.
Our Five-Fold Mission: - Represent the pro-family point of view before local councils, school boards, state legislatures, and Congress
- Speak out in the public arena and in the media
- Train leaders for effective social and political action
- Inform pro-family voters about timely issues and legislation
- Protest anti-Christian bigotry and defend the rights of people of faith.
Our ratings are based on the votes the organization considered most important; the numbers reflect the percentage of time the representative voted the organization's preferred position.
Source: CC website 03n-CC on Dec 31, 2003
Use tax code to reinforce families.
Talent signed the Contract with America:
[As part of the Contract with America, within 100 days we pledge to bring to the House Floor the following bill]:
The Families Reinforcement Act:
Child support enforcement, tax incentives for adoption, strengthening rights of parents in their children’s education, stronger child pornography laws, and an elderly dependent care tax credit to reinforce the central role of families in American society.
Source: Contract with America 93-CWA6 on Sep 27, 1994
TV shows should have explicit viewer advisories.
Talent co-sponsored bill that TV shows should have explicit viewer advisories
Declares that each of the four major television broadcast networks and their affiliates, independent television stations, the Public Broadcasting System, and cable programmers and operators should:
- not telecast programming containing dramatized violence;
- superimpose explicit viewer advisories throughout programming containing dramatized or documentary violence;
- provide explicit audio and on-screen viewer advisories immediately prior to transmittal of such programming;
- not transmit programming promotions or advertisements that contain violence;
- develop a standard scheme for classifying programming on the basis of the amount and type of dramatized violence it contains; and
- educate and inform viewers about the harmful effects of exposure to television violence.
Source: H.RES.202/S.RES.122 93-SR122 on Jun 18, 1993
Page last updated: Nov 22, 2009