Daly is the main host of the Focus on the Family radio program.[2]
Early life, influence, education and career
Daly grew up in Southern California. He was abandoned by his alcoholic father at age five, and orphaned by his mother's death from cancer when he was nine. He was then placed in a foster home, initially in Morongo Valley, California, until he moved in with his older brothers and then with his father, who eventually turned back to alcohol and died. By the time that Daly was a senior in high school, he was living on his own.[3]
Daly worked in the paper industry until he was recruited to join Focus on the Family, at one-third of his six-figure private-sector pay.[4]
He has worked at Focus on the Family for 16 years in a variety of positions, including assistant to the president for Public Affairs, Vice President of the International Division, and a Group Vice President under former Secretary of Energy and Secretary of the Interior Donald P. Hodel (then President of Focus on the Family), before ascending to the presidency.
Focus on the Family
In 2009, the Denver Post reported that Daly shared Dobson's views in the public-policy arena, but had taken a different approach from that of his predecessor. Daly referred to himself as more of an evangelist than a prophet.[4] He believed that the Christian community should demonstrate the values it wishes to promote, and maintain civil discourse.[4][5][6]
While Dobson's approach was often political, Daly and his colleagues have said that he is trying to make it less so.[7][8][9]
According to reports about a decade ago, Daly and his colleagues, similarly to Dobson, opposed abortion and same-sex marriage, but also wished to address issues other than these typical evangelical hot-button issues;[5] they "want[ed] to frame political work as an inspirational call to do good—not just to oppose what they view[ed] as sinful behavior."[7]
In a 2009 interview with the Washington Post, Daly stated,
I am pro-life, I am pro-traditional marriage. At the same time, I'm also a person who looks for the conversation. ... The question I have is, Where can we meet on common ground?
Daly also told the Post, "We will definitely be rigorous in the policy debate. We're not going to back out of that or back off expressing a biblical worldview in the public square."[10]
Daly said that he wished to make abortion much rarer as a step toward eliminating it.[11][12]
In addition to meeting with abortion rights groups at the state and local levels, Daly met with organizational leaders who were traditionally at odds with conservative Protestants, including the Colorado-based gay rights organization the Gill Foundation.[13] Daly also participated in the White House's Fatherhood Initiative.[5] With the Colorado Springs Independent the two organizations co-sponsored an event supporting foster families.[14]
Daly's childhood experience possibly influenced him to start Wait No More, an organization that encourages Christians to adopt children. Wait No More possibly led to a drop in the number of children in foster care in Colorado from 900 to 365.[15] Daly wants Colorado to become the first state to "wipe out the waiting list for foster care."[12]
In 2012, it was reported that Daly reached out to the younger generation through writing for Catalyst, a ministry that develops Christian leaders, and through various speaking engagements at venues such as Kings College in NYC, as well as "The Civil Conversations Project" from On Being with Krista Tippett, featuring conversation between Daly and Q Ideas leader Gabe Lyons.[16]
In 2017, an Associated Press story published by the Denver Post reported that under Daly, Focus on the Family "has scaled back involvement in politics ... [Daly] sees himself as part of a younger generation of religious leadership. ... 'Jesus does not go after Caesar much -- he dealt with people at their point of need,' Daly said, touting the ministry's radio show, counseling and efforts promoting foster care and adoption."[17] A similar assessment is made by religious-studies scholar Susan B. Ridgely, writing in 2017 that Daly has "reached out to second-generation evangelicals ... by softening Dobson's stance on homosexuality, matching anti-abortion rhetoric with pro-adoption and foster care discussion, and keeping open dialogue with all regardless of political party."[18]
^Ridgely, Susan B. (2017). Practicing What the Doctor Preached: At Home with Focus on the Family. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 44 ISBN9780199755073