Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Conversion therapy claim wrong

- TOM KERTSCHER She and her family have donated extensivel­y to groups which promote the idea that students who identify as LGBT must undergo “conversion” therapy and have also affiliated with groups that oppose anti-bullying legislatio­n. The next secretary

An openly gay congressma­n has injected conversion therapy — which aims to use counseling and often religious teaching to convert someone who is homosexual — into the debate over President Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of education.

U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan, a Madison-area Democrat who has called for prohibitin­g the use of such therapy on minors, attacked Betsy DeVos in a letter on Jan. 11, six days before her Senate confirmati­on hearing.

The letter, signed by Pocan and the other four co-chairs of the Congressio­nal LGBT Equality Caucus, was sent to the leaders of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, which is scheduled to vote on DeVos’ nomination next Tuesday. The letter said DeVos, an education activist and a major Republican donor from Michigan, has tried to undermine the rights of people who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgende­r.

And it included a claim about conversion therapy and students, saying of DeVos:

So, Pocan is charging that DeVos and her family “have donated extensivel­y to groups which promote the idea that students who identify as LGBT must undergo ‘conversion’ therapy.”

More on DeVos and conversion therapy

DeVos, whose wealth is estimated by Bloomberg at $130 million, is the daughter-in-law of billionair­e Richard DeVos, the cofounder of Amway. She was part of a previous Pocan claim that Trump’s cabinet appointmen­ts have a net worth of “more than a third of America.” Our rating was Mostly True. One-third of American households have a combined net worth of roughly zero. So, the combined net worth of Trump cabinet members is greater, though so is that of any American who has a net worth of more than

LGBT issues

U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) The statement Says Betsy DeVos and her family “have donated extensivel­y to groups which promote the idea that students who identify as LGBT must undergo ‘conversion’ therapy.” The verdict No evidence for “must.”

zero.

At DeVos’ confirmati­on hearing, she was asked about her family donating to groups that push conversion therapy. She disputed the characteri­zation of her family’s donations and, though Pocan’s claim doesn’t refer to her personal position on conversion therapy, DeVos said she has “never believed in that.”

Conversion therapy — also known as reparative therapy and sexual orientatio­n change effort — is supported by some Christian groups, such as Focus on the Family, which says it should be available for people who have “unwanted homosexual attraction­s.”

A number of medical groups warn of its dangers, and at least two of them — the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n and the American Academy of Family Physicians — oppose it. The associatio­n says the risks include depression, anxiety and self-destructiv­e behavior.

U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin (DWis.) announced Monday that she will oppose DeVos’ nomination.

Money part of Pocan’s claim

To back Pocan’s claim, his office cited two groups: Focus on the Family and the Traditiona­l Values Coalition. Let’s start with the “donated extensivel­y” part of the claim.

The office cited reports from two interest groups on Coloradoba­sed Focus on the Family, which was founded by James Dobson, an evangelica­l Christian. One says the DeVos family has given more than $6.7 million to Focus on the Family and the other says DeVos and her husband, Dick, have given $275,000 to the group.

We found a comparable figure by checking federal tax records. They show that from 2003 to 2015, the Edgar and Elsa Prince Foundation of Holland, Mich., gave $5.7 million to Focus on the Family. DeVos was listed as the foundation’s vice president, though at her Senate confirmati­on hearing, she said that was a “clerical error.”

In contrast, Pocan’s office did not cite any reports on DeVos giving to the Traditiona­l Values Coalition, a California-based conservati­ve religious activist group. And we found nothing in tax records to indicate DeVos contributi­ons to the coalition.

(Two web articles say the Dick and Betsy DeVos Family Foundation has given money to the Traditiona­l Values Coalition. But the article appears to mix up the coalition with the Michigan-based Foundation for Traditiona­l Values, which the DeVos foundation has supported.)

Conversion therapy part of the claim

As for the second part of Pocan’s claim, we found indication­s that both groups cited by the congressma­n support conversion therapy. But no evidence that they believe that students who identify as LGBT must undergo it. And a spokeswoma­n for the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks such groups, said the center is not aware of either group making such a statement.

Focus on the Family has issued statements in support of people changing their orientatio­n, including this one from June 2013:

The group also maintains a web page titled “Leaving Homosexual­ity.” One section notes there is opposition to conversion therapy, but states “there is a great deal of evidence that also shows that people have been helped” by such therapy. It says “individual­s should have the availabili­ty of profession­al therapy options for unwanted homosexual attraction­s and behavior.”

A Focus on the Family spokesman told us that “many individual­s — including students — with same sex-attraction­s find those feelings to be in conflict with their faith and Focus on the Family strongly supports their right to seek help from licensed mental You can watch PolitiFact Wisconsin segments on Wednesday and Friday evenings during the TODAY’S TMJ 4 Live at 6 newscast.

health profession­als as they work to resolve this conflict and steward their sexuality according to their religious beliefs.”

The evidence is less clear for the Traditiona­l Values Coalition, which hosted a “Christian Inaugural Gala” as part of Trump’s inaugurati­on.

The Los Angeles Times reported on a conversion therapy conference that was led by evangelist Louis P. Sheldon, the coalition’s founder. But the conference was in 1990, the article didn’t mention students and we didn’t find any more recent statements from the coalition about conversion therapy.

To be sure, the coalition is not viewed as friendly to gay people.

Its website says military chaplains are being prevented “from speaking out in any way against homosexual­ity.” And in 2015, the coalition filed a lawsuit, which was dismissed, seeking to block the Fairfax County School Board in Virginia from implementi­ng protection­s the board put in place for gay and transgende­r students.

Our rating

Pocan says DeVos and her family “have donated extensivel­y to groups which promote the idea that students who identify as LGBT must undergo ‘conversion’ therapy.”

A family foundation that listed DeVos as the vice president has given millions of dollars over more than a decade to one of two groups cited by Pocan, Focus on the Family. But we couldn’t find evidence of donations to the Traditiona­l Values Coalition. And although there are indication­s that both groups support conversion therapy, we didn’t find evidence that they promote the idea that students who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgende­r must undergo it.

For a statement that contains only an element of truth, our rating is Mostly False.

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