Parents of Christian school students urged to vote for religious freedom

Christian Schools Australia has sent out flyers to parents at 329 schools across Australia urging them to vote for religious freedom on Saturday.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison during a visit to Galilee Catholic Primary School in Sydney.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison during a visit to Galilee Catholic Primary School in Sydney. Source: AAP

Parents of children at Christian schools across Australia are being urged to vote for the party that protects religious freedom on Saturday. 

Christian Schools Australia has ramped up its campaign on religious freedom, sending out flyers to parents of children at 329 schools outlining parties' position on the issue. 

The flyers warn parents that since the same-sex marriage survey and the review of religious freedom, there have been attempts to remove long standing protections.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison during a visit to Galilee Catholic Primary School in Sydney.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison during a visit to Galilee Catholic Primary School in Sydney. Source: AAP
"This election will be the most critical for religious freedom in living memory," the flyer claims.

CSA stops short of telling parents which party to vote for, but highlights Labor's planned changes to the Sex Discrimination Act.
The flyers given to parents with children attending Christian schools.
The flyers given to parents with children attending Christian schools. Source: Supplied
"We have to be very careful, we've provided the policy information and it's really up to parents to work out which parties are going to protect their values," Christian Schools Australia national executive officer Mark Spencer told SBS News. 

Mr Spencer said the move was unprecedented. 

"We have certainly ramped it up a lot because this issue is so important to us." 

Christian schools were alarmed by attempts last year to change the Sex Discrimination Act to prevent religious schools being able to expel students or sack staff on the basis of their sexuality. 

The flyer describes claims of expulsions of same-sex attracted students as false and says the proposed changes "would have threatened the ability of Christian schools to teach what we believe". 

The intervention from CSA comes after Prime Minister Scott Morrison's

Mr Morrison was forced to clarify that he does not believe gay people go to hell, after he earlier did not answer a question about his religious beliefs on gay people.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison was part of the 2009 inquiry that found the health requirement to be discriminatory to people with a disability.
"I'm not running for the Pope, I'm running for the Prime Minister," Mr Morrison later told reporters. Source: AAP
"No, I do not believe that. It was a desperate, cheap shot from Bill Shorten who is looking to distract attention from his housing tax that will undermine the value of people's homes," Mr Morrison said in a statement on Tuesday.

"I'm not running for the Pope, I'm running for the Prime Minister," Mr Morrison later told reporters. 


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2 min read
Published 15 May 2019 8:34am
By Rosemary Bolger
Source: SBS News


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