The GOP’s Mean-Spirited Hostility Towards Food Stamps
September 14th, 2013 12:00 am Cynthia Tucker
For decades now, the Republican Party has been honing its reputation
for hostility toward the downtrodden, the poor, the disadvantaged. While
a few of its leaders have tried to either shed that image or to dress
it up with a more appealing facade — think George W. Bush’s
“compassionate conservatism” — lately the GOP has been enthusiastically
embracing its inner Ebenezer Scrooge.
Consider its all-out assault on one of the government’s most
venerable programs to assist the most vulnerable, the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program, usually known as “food stamps.” Last
month, the GOP-dominated House passed an agriculture bill that omitted
funding for the food stamp program — partly because the Republican
caucus disagreed over whether cuts to the program should be merely harsh
or extremely severe. Congressional conservatives have said they also
want to include a work requirement and mandatory drug tests for
beneficiaries.
Not so long ago, hardliners sought to cloak this sort of cruelty in
the language of the greater good: the need to reduce government
spending. But last month’s bill didn’t even attempt that pretense: It
included billions in agricultural subsidies for wealthy farming
interests, including some Republican members of Congress. It was the
first time since 1973 that the House of Representatives omitted the food
stamp program from the farm bill.
“It sounds to me like we’re in a downright mean time,” said Bill
Bolling, founder and executive director of the Atlanta Community Food
Bank, which procured and distributed 45 million pounds of donated food
and groceries in the last year. He said that his agency has doubled its
distribution over the last four years, since the Great Recession
devastated household incomes.
The profile of his client base has changed, too, over the last four
years, he said. About 20 percent of beneficiaries report that this is
the first time they’ve ever asked for assistance from government or
charitable programs. Among them are people who once belonged to the
secure middle class; some were formerly donors or volunteers at the food
bank.
Moreover, Bolling said, about half the people who seek food assistance have jobs.
“They’re keeping their part of the social contract. They are getting
up every day and going to a job, maybe two jobs. If a man gets up and
goes to work every day, I don’t care what his job is, he ought to be
able to feed his family,” he said.
Conservative critics paint a very different
picture. They tend to speak contemptuously of those struggling to make
ends meet, to describe a lazy “47 percent” who want nothing but
handouts, to dismiss those who can’t make ends meet as responsible for
their own hard luck.
Some of that hostility toward struggling Americans can be explained
by a racial antagonism that presumes that most of them are black or
brown. In
Us Against Them: Ethnocentric Foundations of American Opinion,
University of Michigan professor Donald Kinder and Vanderbilt professor
Cindy Kam explain that means-tested programs such as food stamps have
long been associated with the black poor. That makes them more likely to
be viewed with suspicion by “ethnocentric” whites — those more likely
to be antagonistic toward other racial groups.
Kinder and Kam say that public discourse by political “elites” —
especially those on the conservative side of the spectrum — has
“racialized” means-tested welfare programs. “Programs like … food stamps
are understood by whites to largely benefit shiftless black people,”
they write.
Those beliefs have persisted even though the Great Recession laid
waste to the finances of many white families, too. They account for
about 35.5 percent of food stamp recipients. Black Americans are
disproportionately represented, but account for only about 23 percent.
Latinos account for about 10 percent of recipients, while other racial
groups account for smaller percentages, according to government data.
(Eighteen percent of food stamp recipients belong to “race unknown.”)
Not that the facts tend to matter in a debate such as this. Nor do
common decency and simple compassion hold much sway. If they did, there
would be far fewer parents worrying about how to feed their children
tonight.
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