Hillary Clinton
Related: About this forumSome Facts About the 1996 Welfare Reform Act
Last edited Thu Feb 25, 2016, 11:14 AM - Edit history (1)
First it was not a Bill Clinton bill like Sanders and other Clinton critics would have people believe. It was the brainchild of Bob Dole and Newt Gingrich.
Second Bill Clinton vetoed two previous bills that came to his desk to sign. He held out for three much needed amendments. Just what were those additions?
Foodstamps-Clinton managed to preserve national standards and the guarantee that the poor will obtain food stamps. Congress had called for letting the states do whatever they wanted with food stamp money and program eligibility requirements.
Child Care - Clinton succeeded in strengthening day care support for children of welfare recipients. Congress had been demanding much deeper cuts.
Medicaid - Clinton demanded and won the fight to guarantee Medicaid coverage, which generally helps the disabled and poor children. Congress wanted to let states do whatever they wanted with Medicaid, including taking Medicaid funds and using them for other purposes.
I am not here to defend the bill but it was going to pass and with enough votes to override his veto. If the Clinton's cared so little about the non rich why did they fight so hard to include the above provisions.
See the linked post here:
http://nwcitizen.com/oldsite/usa/welfare-reform.html
Cha
(298,985 posts)Snarkoleptic
(6,003 posts)n/t
Lucinda
(31,170 posts)Snarkoleptic
(6,003 posts)Would it have been so bad to veto, let Republicans fight to override and have them own this?
I think not.
Not everything should be up for negotiation.
Lucinda
(31,170 posts)You would have let all those people suffer? Really?
Snarkoleptic
(6,003 posts)As I said, not everything should be up for negotiation.
If the republiClowns wanted it that badly, make them fight for, and own it.
Lucinda
(31,170 posts)I think these lurkers have little idea about what they are talking about.
Snarkoleptic
(6,003 posts)Had he vetoed the thing, the override would have given us exactly what we got, but the albatross would hang around the necks of Gingrich and his merry band of miscreants.
It landed on his desk during a re-election cycle, so he signed it.
Tommy2Tone
(1,307 posts)I just don't get the Bernie fans?
They were going to destroy food stamps and medicaid. This mentality is why we can't elect Bernie.
romana
(765 posts)Ideological purity is great in abstraction, but the minute you insist on applying it to the real world people suffer. Not worth it.
Lucinda
(31,170 posts)We don't always get everything we want, by design.
Never thought I would ever hear someone on DU basically say to throw those poor suffering people to the curb. And the other guys can own it!
Sure don't want a POTUS that would ever consider it.
Tommy2Tone
(1,307 posts)Oh and I say the Clinton's because if they are going to blame Hillary for every thing Bill did then I give her credit for all the great things he did.
Also during their eight years more people moved above the poverty line since they have been keeping track.
I know that doesn't fit the right wing talking points narrative that are used here at DU but those pesky facts get in the way of their arguments.
Lucinda
(31,170 posts)And I'm with you, if she's getting the blame, I'm giving her the credit too!
Snarkoleptic
(6,003 posts)The only difference would be that THEY would own it. Not sure how that's me advocating "throw those poor suffering people to the curb".
Bill campaigned on "ending welfare as we know it" and was out of political room to stall.
wysi
(1,512 posts)As Tommy outlined above, the provisions protecting food stamps, Medicare and child care for welfare recipients would not have been part of it had they overridden the veto. Medicare (for example) would now be a relic of the past in red states, replaced with nothing, had that Congress gotten what they wanted.
This kind of compromise is how representative government, or at least responsible representative government, works.
Snarkoleptic
(6,003 posts)Protecting entitlement programs by cutting them, sounds reasonable.
DemonGoddess
(4,640 posts)that the people who make use of these programs don't generally feel entitled to them. I speak from experience. We hit a bad patch, and ended up applying. I reported everything I made, of course, so as things started turning better, I got less and less of my "entitlement". Let me tell you something. It is unpleasant to have to live your life under a microscope because you are trying to get assistance for your children. Sure, as with anything, there are going to be people who abuse the system. The system which is set up to HELP those who are in need. A few bad apples do not make the rest of the people who've ever had to do this, entitled.
Snarkoleptic
(6,003 posts)that I'm defending these programs, while apologists up-thread are making excuses for Bill Clinton campaigning for, and following-through on massive cuts to them.
In this context, entitlement is a government program guaranteeing access to some benefit by members of a specific group and based on established rights or by legislation.
Somehow "the very serious people" have decided that entitlement is a dirty word and benefits must be undermined and/or eliminated.
Lucinda
(31,170 posts)Starry Messenger
(32,342 posts)They gutted the National Endowment of the Arts too--Clinton managed to hang on to community arts funding, but grants to individual artists were halted. Not as life-endangering as the cuts outlined in the OP, but I just wanted to add to the flavor of the times. The Reaganites were still driving their agendas.