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Jim Wallis' article:
"War on the Poor"
If you are not familiar with Jim Wallis, you
need to do three things:
- Purchase his book,
God's Politics: Why the Right Gets It
Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It.
- Visit his website,
http://www.sojo.net .
- Subscribe to his magazine "Sojourner."
War on the Poor
by Jim Wallis
In These Times
magazine, October 2003
I did a
right wing talk show not long ago on Fox News.
Whenever you mention poverty in a venue like that,
they scream that you're engaging in class warfare
and promptly declare war on you.
I've decided
that the right wing is correct on this: There is a
class war, but they and their political allies are
the ones who have declared it. As Episcopal Bishop
John Chane said at a recent chapel service: "We've
gone from a war on poverty to a war on the poor."
For those
who care about poverty in America, the coming
months are a critical time, a turning point
similar to the New Deal of the '30s or the War on
Poverty in the '60s. Now, as then, we can make a
difference in the lives of millions of people. It
is a time for people to speak and act on behalf of
those still trapped in poverty.
Income
Distribution
In its
annual tax analysis for 2000, the IRS
reported that the top 400 taxpayers-only 0.00014
percent of the population-now take in more than 1
percent of the total income of all taxpayers.
Meantime, their tax payments plummeted, mostly due
to substantial reductions in capital gains tax
rates. In 2000, the average annual income of the
top 400 increased to $174 million, while the
average income for the bottom 90 percent was
$27,000. Even the Wall Street Journal calls it "so
much money in so few hands ... a startling
accumulation of wealth at the very top of the
income pyramid." The "income gap," wrote the
Journal, is becoming a "vast chasm."
The Bush
Budget
A budget is
a moral document. It clearly demonstrates the
priorities of a family, an organization, a
government. A budget shows what we most care
about. President Bush sent his budget to Congress
in February-a budget that he said reflected his
most important priorities-so it is worth paying
close attention to.
The
president's budget of $2.23 trillion proposed a
record deficit of $300 billion, speeded up
billions of dollars of tax cuts that provide most
of their benefits to the wealthiest Americans,
called for huge increases for the Pentagon and
slashed domestic spending-including core
government programs that create affordable
housing, curb juvenile delinquency, hire police
officers, bring aid to rural schools, help make
childcare available to low-income working mothers
and guarantee children's health insurance. There
are the Bush priorities.
The rest of
the programs for mentoring and volunteering laid
out in the president's State of the Union speech,
while good, are relatively low-cost and ultimately
more symbolic than substantial. Without the
crucial funding for programs that directly and
effectively reduce poverty, "compassionate
conservatism" is now in grave danger of becoming
compassionless conservatism.
Tax and
Funding Cuts
It is now
clear that the ongoing costs of the war with
Iraq
and the Bush administration's tax cuts for the
wealthy are leading to a crisis for
America's
poorest children. Indeed, America's poor were the
first casualties of this war, as U.S. domestic
needs were literally pushed off the political
agenda.
In April,
Congress approved nearly $80 billion requested by
the administration as the first payment for the
war with Iraq. Then they agreed to a budget
resolution containing billions of dollars in new
tax cuts and increased spending for the military,
while resources for important domestic programs
fell below the amount needed even to maintain
current services in a deteriorating situation for
the poor. In September, the president asked for
speedy approval of an additional $87 billion for
military operations and reconstruction efforts in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
The
consequences of these actions constitute a silent
war, felt most severely in the poorest parts of
the United States, where low-income families are
desperately clutching onto the bottom rungs of the
failing economy. Virtually every state in America
is suffering terrible budget deficits. But there
is no money in this budget for the states, which
are confronting huge deficits and the prospect of
draconian cuts in social services, mostly to the
poor. In fact, the administration suggests that
states could meet their budget challenges with the
"flexibility" to cue programs like health
insurance for the nation's poorest children.
Consider some recent news stories telling of the
administration's plans:
* Cuts in
Medicaid benefits mean that millions of low-income
Americans will see reductions in or will lose
health insurance entirely.
* Vouchers
that assist nearly 2 million families to pay rent
will be replaced by block grants run by the
states, with no accountability for funding
decisions.
* In the
last two years, nearly half the states have cut
childcare funding.
The truth is
that hungry people will go without food stamps,
poor children will go without health care, elderly
will go without medicine, and school children will
go without textbooks, so that the taxes of the
wealthiest Americans can be further reduced.
Child Tax
Credit
The
exclusion of low-income working families from the
child tax credit is becoming a parable, revealing
a lesson about what happens to poor families and
their children, again and again- they are simply
left out.
Most of the
country now knows that the $350 billion tax cut
passed this spring primarily benefited the
wealthiest of Americans. Estimates are that each
millionaire will receive $93,000. Yet 1 percent of
the total tax cut-$3.5 billion-could not be found
for families who struggle mightily just to get by.
As part of the legislation, the child tax credit
for middle- and upper-income families was
accelerated, and checks of $400 were sent out. The
Senate added an amendment to also accelerate the
refundability of the child credit, so that working
families who earn between $10,500 and $26,650
would benefit.
But at the
last minute, in the House-Senate conference
committee, that amendment was
Republicans
said they wanted further reductions in
capital-gains tax rates. When the deed was
revealed and the storm broke, the Senate quickly
fixed the omission in a way that costs the
Treasury nothing. But the Republican leadership of
the House, seemingly oblivious to the political
damage feared by the White House, brazenly tacked
the low-income family child tax credit onto
another $78 billion tax cut for wealthier
families- in other words, using the restoration of
the measure for poor families to increase tax cuts
for the rich.
The issue
deadlocked, and some Republicans have actually
admitted that their tactic is an attempt to kill
the child tax credit restoration altogether. As
checks went in the mail for middle-class families,
low-income working parents wonder why they got
left out in the cold. Majority Leader Tom Delay's
answer: "There are a lot of other things that ate
mote important than this."
Welfare
Reform
In 1996,
after much contentious debate, Congress passed
historic welfare reform legislation. Direct
federal cash assistance to people in poverty was
ended, consolidated into block grants to the
states-known as Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families, or TANF. The intention of the program
was a change in paradigm from welfare to work.
Five years
later the track record is mixed. Welfare rolls
have been reduced by 50 percent, partly due to the
new emphasis and
Homeless in
Chicago
partly due
to an economy that was-for most of that time-
booming. The overall poverty rate and the child
poverty rate both declined. Yet too many working
people remain poor. Their jobs are mostly
entry-level and minimum wage with few or no
benefits. Many are only part time. Twelve million
children are still in poverty.
The 1996 law
also prohibited legal immigrants who entered the
United States after 1996 from receiving public
benefits. Some proposals in Congress would
eliminate that ban and open eligibility to
immigrants who have achieved legal status. The
administration proposes restoring eligibility for
food stamps only, keeping a ban on other forms of
assistance.
What's the
best way to build on the undeniable successes and
make changes to improve the weaknesses of welfare
reform? There are several key areas where we
should focus our efforts.
First, and
most important, must be a conceptual shift from
ending welfare to ending poverty. We must | change
the political debate to measure our success by
reducing the number of people in poverty, rather
than just by reducing welfare tolls.
Then there
is the basic question of funding. Some of the
pending proposals, including the Bush
administration's, maintain TANF funding at the
same level it has been for the last
five years-a
total of $16.5 billion | per year-for the next
five. But in | real terms, flat funding is a cut.
That $16.5 billion won't buy now what it did in
1996, and certainly won't in 2007. This is no time
to cut our concern, care and commitment to poor
people and their children. Other proposals call
for indexing the amount so that it increases by
the rate of inflation. We have a clear moral
message. A budget proposing billions a year in
increases for the military and massive tax cuts
for the wealthiest-while cutting funding for
overcoming poverty-is unacceptable.
When debates
are framed wrongly, they almost inevitably turn
out badly. That happens all the time on Capitol
Hill. In the welfare debate, focusing on simply
reducing welfare rolls instead of reducing poverty
is still the major problem. Most people involved
in anti-poverty efforts would agree now that
helping low-income people find "self-sufficiency"
is far preferable to a system of endless subsidy.
But what are
the best ways to support people in moving from
subsidy to sustenance? And if work is the best way
out of poverty (as most of us now agree), how do
we make work really work in America? What do
people need in support for childcare, in real
education and training, in securing health care or
affordable housing?
The TANF
re-authorization debate could become a national
discussion about how to overcome poverty in
America. In fact, the debate doesn't make any
sense apart from the goal of poverty reduction.
Let's state our goal clearly and
unanimously-welfare reform should be judged by how
much we are actually reducing poverty. Then let's
have the most honest debate we've ever had about
how to do that.
Reconstruction of Iraq
President
Bush asked for $87 billion more to pay for the
American occupation and reconstruction of Iraq.
New reports already reveal the comparative costs
and sacrifices of this enormous expenditure: The
entire proposed fiscal-year budget for the
Department of Health and Human Services is $66
billion; l for the Department of Education, $53
billion. The total amount for all 50 states to
meet their projected budget shortfalls this year
is $78 billion.
Clearly the
sacrifices for the war in Iraq will be borne by
those in most need who will bear the brunt of
inevitable spending cuts to vital social programs,
and by future generations who will ultimately pay
for the beneficiaries of the Bush tax cuts and the
recipients of the lucrative contracts for Iraqi
reconstruction that are going to carefully
selected American corporations. Those who will not
sacrifice, in other words, are the wealthy and
powerful allies of the Bush administration-and
their core constituency. It is not hyperbole to
say that those beneficiaries of wartime tax cuts
and contract deals should now be called war
profiteers.
So I propose
two sacrifices the Bush administration should now
make, if they expect the rest of the nation to
share in the sacrifices of rebuilding Iraq. First,
the White House should admit its miscalculations
and policy failures. And those responsible for the
failures should be the first to sacrifice.
Therefore, the chief architects of the failed
Iraqi policy- Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz-should both be
asked to resign. These chief Utiilateralists have
presided over the policy failures and, if a better
direction of international cooperation is to be
restored in Iraq, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz must step
aside. Rep. David Obey (D-Wisc..) already has
called for their resignations.
Second, if
the White House calls for sacrifice are to have
any moral credibility, the administration's tax
cuts to the wealthiest Americans must be
immediately rescinded. Neither the poor, nor our
children and their children, should be forced to
pay for the war in Iraq, while those with the
greatest ability to sacrifice are reaping a
whirlwind of benefit.
Whether the
resignations of Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz or the
repeal of the tax cuts are politically likely at
this moment (and they aren't) is not the point.
There are fundamental issues of moral
accountability here that go beyond political
calculation. And those questions of accountability
will be especially vital during an election year.
Jim Wallis is editor-in-chief of Sojourners, which
previously published the stories from which this
article was excerpted. For more go to
www.sojo.net.
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