[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 5 (Thursday, January 9, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H79]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE WAR ON POVERTY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Fudge) for 5 minutes.
Ms. FUDGE. Mr. Speaker, today I rise to commemorate the 50th
anniversary of President Lyndon B. Johnson's war on poverty.
In 1964, President Johnson stood in this Chamber and addressed a
Congress that represented a nation where more than 25 percent of
Americans lived in poverty. In his address, President Johnson launched
an agenda that led to the creation of Medicare, Medicaid, Job Corps,
Head Start, and nutrition assistance for those who struggle to put food
on their table.
His war, and its resulting programs, helped move millions out of
poverty. From 1967 to 2012, the poverty rate fell from 26 percent to 16
percent, largely because of the strong safety net programs initiated by
President Johnson's agenda.
Yet here we are today, 50 years later, and too many Americans are
still living on the outskirts of hope because the war on poverty has
now become a war on the poor. In the last year alone, Congress has
agreed to indiscriminate, across-the-board cuts known as sequestration
in an effort to balance the budget, and the House passed a farm bill
that cut SNAP by $40 billion. Sequestration hurts the very people who
need help the most by greatly reducing critical funding to programs
like WIC and Head Start.
Congress drastically cut one of the most powerful antipoverty
programs, SNAP, better known as food stamps. That is absurd when,
according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, SNAP kept 4.9
million Americans out of poverty in 2012 alone, including 2.2 million
children.
Congress has also chosen not to extend unemployment insurance. Even
though our country continues to lift itself out of the recession, many
Americans still need our support. Turning our back on the 1.4 million
Americans who have lost their jobs through no fault of their own is
unconscionable.
In an interview yesterday, I was asked to respond to a quote
regarding unemployment insurance by a Republican, and this is what he
said. He said:
We have to introduce the blessing of work to people who
have never seen it.
And let me just say, to be clear, he could not possibly have been
talking about unemployment insurance, because you have to have worked
to even receive it. So he obviously doesn't know what unemployment
insurance is.
And to my colleague, I say that the American people know that they
should be blessed with work, but they need meaningful work with a
living wage.
I will continue to be a voice for the poor and will always fight on
behalf of the 46 million Americans trying to survive in households with
inadequate incomes. Americans need us to open the gates of opportunity
so they can eat properly, get a quality education, and find good-paying
jobs.
So on this 50th anniversary, I am making it clear that the war on
poverty might be over, but the fight for the poor is not. We must
reinforce the plans of President Johnson that would ensure all
Americans can support themselves and their families and have better
chances to contribute to our economy and our society. This is the way
we build upon the progress we have made over the past five decades, not
by taking action to reverse it.
To paraphrase Dr. King, he says, we have an obligation to those who
have been left out of the sunlight of opportunity.
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