“The Senate refuses to cut $20 billion out of $770 billion”.
By WSJ Editors
The next time someone moans
about Washington "austerity," tell them about the Senate's food stamp
votes on Tuesday. Democrats and a few Republicans united to block even modest
reform in a welfare program that has exploded in the last decade and is set to
spend $770 billion in the next 10 years.
Yes, $770 billion on a single
program. And you wonder why the U.S. had its credit-rating downgraded?
When the food stamp program
began in the 1970s, it was designed to help about 1 of 50 Americans who were in
severe financial distress. But thanks to eligibility changes first by President
George W. Bush as part of the 2002 farm bill and then by President Obama in the
2008 stimulus, food stamps are becoming the latest middle-class entitlement.
A record 44.7 million people
received food stamps in fiscal 2011, up from 28.2 million as recently as 2008.
The cost has more than doubled in that same period, to $78 billion, and is on
track to account for 78% of farm bill spending over the next decade. One in seven
Americans now qualifies.
Once there was a stigma to
going on the dole, and it was seen as a last resort. But now the Agriculture
Department runs radio and TV ads prodding people to get the free food, as in a
recent campaign that says food stamps will help you lose weight. A federal
website boasts about strategies that have "increased program
participation" with special emphasis on Hispanics because "our data
show that many low-income Latinos simply don't apply for [food stamps] even though
they're eligible."
In the 1990s Bill Clinton
boasted that welfare reform took Americans off the dole. The Obama
Administration boasts about how many it has added.
Enter Alabama Republican Jeff Sessions, who proposed reforms to limit the worst excesses. One proposal would have established a federal asset test to ensure that food stamps aren't going to families that may not have an income but have tens of thousands of dollars in savings or may even live in a million-dollar home. Some 39 states have no real asset test for food stamps, which means wealthy families without anyone in the job market are eligible, and 27 have gross-income limits that are above 130% of the federal poverty guidelines.
That amendment lost 56-43,
with every Democrat except Missouri's Claire McCaskill opposing it. New England
Republicans Scott Brown, Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe
Mr. Sessions also tried to end
the preposterous federal policy of paying some $500 million in bonuses to states
that sign up more people for food
stamps. This is the way government becomes a permanent feedback loop promoting
even bigger government. That amendment lost 58-41, with every self-described
Democratic "deficit hawk" opposed.
Still to come is
an amendment on another egregious practice that lets some 15 states
automatically enroll families for food stamps if they get federal home-heating
subsidies. Some states mail heating subsidy checks of as little as $1 a month
so families can qualify for federal food stamp benefits of as much as $130 a
month. That amendment too is expected to fail.
It's true that the recession
and feeble recovery have expanded the number of people who need food
assistance, but Mr. Sessions's reforms would have harmed no one who really
needs help. His amendments would have saved at most some $20 billion over 10
years, which would still leave some three-quarters of a trillion dollars in
outlays.
Earlier this year, House
Republicans passed their own food stamp reform that will save some $34 billion
over a decade. That bill will now go to a House-Senate farm bill conference,
and perhaps some savings can be salvaged. But the news in the Senate vote is
that the political class still isn't remotely serious about reforming
government. The voters are going to have to clean out a lot more spenders in
November if they want real change.
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