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It
has long been said that Americans have short attention
spans, but this is ridiculous: Our bold, urgent,
far-reaching, post-Katrina war on poverty lasted
maybe a month.
Credit
for our ability to reach rapid closure on the
poverty issue goes first to a group of congressional
conservatives who seized the post-Katrina initiative
before advocates of poverty reduction could get
their plans off the ground.
As
soon as President Bush announced his first spending
package for reconstructing New Orleans and the
Gulf Coast, the Republican Study Committee and
other conservatives switched the subject from
poverty reduction to how Katrina reconstruction
plans might increase the deficit that their own
tax-cutting policies helped create.
Unwilling
to freeze any of the tax cuts, these conservatives
proposed cutting other spending to offset Katrina
costs. The headlines focused on the seemingly
easy calls on pork-barrel spending. But some of
their biggest cuts were in health care programs,
including Medicaid, and other spending for the
poor.
Thus,
the budget Congress is now considering would cut
spending by $35 billion and cut taxes by $70 billion.
Excuse me, but doesn't this increase the deficit
by a net of $35 billion?
Don't
worry, said Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana, one of
the leading House conservatives. Cutting taxes
for the rich is the best antipoverty program.
"I'm mindful of what a pipe fitter once said to
President Reagan," Pence said, according to the
New York Times. " 'I've never been hired by a
poor man.' A growing economy is in the interest
of every working American, regardless of their
income."
In
other words, the conservatives have moved the
conversation to ideas that go back to Calvin Coolidge's
low-tax economics from the 1920s. And they say
liberals are the folks with the "old" ideas?
If
it didn't matter, I'd be inclined to salute the
agenda-setting genius of the right wing. But since
we need a national conversation on poverty, it's
worth considering that conservatives were successful
in pushing it back in part because of weaknesses
on the liberal side.
Right
out of the box, conservatives started blaming
the persistent poverty unearthed by Katrina on
the failure of "liberal programs." If there was
a liberal retort, it didn't get much coverage
in the supposedly liberal media.
It's
conservatives, after all, who spent almost a decade
touting the genius of the 1996 welfare reform
and claiming that because so many people had been
driven off the welfare rolls, poverty was no longer
a problem.
Yes,
welfare reform worked better than some of us expected
in the 1990s. But Katrina underscored the limits
of welfare reform by showing how many people had
been left behind. It also brought home the failure
of conservative economics. The Clinton economy
-- bolstered by balanced budgets, tax increases
on the rich and the expansion of innovative programs
such as the earned-income tax credit and health
coverage for the poor -- cut the number of poor
people by 7.7 million between 1993 and 2000. Between
2001 and 2004, on the other hand, the number of
those in poverty rose by 4.1 million.
Or
consider that a recent Census Bureau report found
that the percentage of Americans getting private
job-based health insurance fell from 63.6 percent
in 2000 to 59.8 percent in 2004. What held down
the number of Americans without insurance altogether?
The proportion insured under government programs
-- Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance
Program -- rose from 10.6 percent in 2000 to 12.9
percent in 2004. A time when more Americans than
ever need government-provided health insurance
is when we should expand government assistance
for health care, not cut it back. It's also a
good time for raising the minimum wage and increasing
the help the earned-income tax credit offers the
working poor.
But
liberals also need to seize the initiative by
speaking candidly and not defensively about the
social causes of poverty. These include family
breakdown and the heavy concentration of very
poor people in a small number of neighborhoods
in our big cities. Just because some conservatives
are tempted, wrongly, to blame all poverty on
problems in the family doesn't mean that liberals
should shy away from talking about the difficulties
faced by children in fatherless homes.
I
was naive enough to hope that after Katrina the
left and the right might have useful things to
say to each other about how to help the poorest
among us. I guess we've moved on. You can lay
a lot of the blame for this indifference on conservatives.
But it will be a default on the part of liberals
if the poor disappear again from public view without
a fight.
Topplebush.com
Posted: October 20,
2005
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