Nebraska Family Alliance

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Established1988
MissionAdvancing Family, Freedom, and Life
FocusInfluencing Policy, Mobilizing Prayer, and Empowering People
PresidentJay Huston[1]
Nebraska Family Alliance
Established1988
MissionAdvancing Family, Freedom, and Life
FocusInfluencing Policy, Mobilizing Prayer, and Empowering People
PresidentJay Huston[1]
BudgetRevenue: $483,489
Expenses: $343,478
(FYE 2019)[2]
Address1106 E St, Lincoln, NE 68508
Location
Websitenebraskafamilyalliance.org

The Nebraska Family Alliance (NFA) is a fundamentalist Christian 501(c)(3) organization based in Lincoln, Nebraska. It most prominently lobbies against LGBT rights, such as same-sex marriage and LGBT adoption. The NFA also seeks legal restrictions on abortion, and to change public policy on gambling and human trafficking. It advocates for traditional family structures and gender roles.

As a family policy council, the NFA is a state-level affiliate of Focus on the Family. The NFA's stated mission is to "advance family, freedom, and life by influencing policy, mobilizing prayer, and empowering people."

Nebraska Family Alliance was founded in 1988 as Nebraska Family Council. Its name changed to the current one when it merged with Family First, another Nebraska-based conservative organization, in 2013.[3]

Nebraska Family Alliance headquarters in Lincoln

NFA is a family policy council and aligned with Alliance Defending Freedom, Focus on the Family, and Family Policy Alliance.[4] Like its allies, the NFA advocates for conservative social goals that it calls "family values."

In a review of former Nebraska attorney general Don Stenberg's book Eavesdropping on Lucifer, NFA's executive director encouraged readers to "[overcome] forces of evil" in order to ensure "families thrive, life is cherished and religious freedom flourishes."[5]

Criticism

Several LGBT publications refer to the organization as a hate group.[6][7][8] In an interview, Executive Director Karen Bowling shared that some critics had begun selling T-shirts that read "NFA is a Hate Group."[9]

Policy efforts

Notable people

References

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