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Decades of Distortion - Endnotes1 Pub. L. No. 104-193, 110 Stat. 2105, 42 U. S. C. Sec. 601, et seq. (Supp. 1997). 2 "In 89.4% of AFDC assistance units there is no father in the home." Staff of House Committee on Ways and Means, 104th Cong., 2nd Sess., Background Material and Data on Programs Within the Jurisdiction of the Comm. on Ways and Means 474 (1996) [hereinafter 1996 Green Book]. 3 See Lucy A. Williams, The Ideology of Division: Behavior Modification Welfare Reform Proposals, 102 Yale L.J. 719, 724 (1992). 4 See Jerome L. Himmelstein, To the Right: The Transformation of American Conservatism 65 (1990) ("conservatism was at a nadir" in the late 1950s, with "no independent conservative movement to speak of, no dense network of activists, ideas, and organizations dedicated to conservative goals") and Alan Crawford, Thunder on the Right 4 (1980) for a discussion of the resurgence of the Right during this period. 5 The author has read the following Right publications over the past 30 years: American Spectator (1991-95), Conservative Chronicle (2/86-3/87, 6/92-8/95), Family Voice (7/85-4/95); Human Events (3-6 months in the years 1964-1974), Phyllis Schlafly Report (11/81-3/95), Policy Review (1977-1995), Public Interest (1964-1995), Reason (1973-1995), and the Washington Inquirer (3/30/90, 4/13/90, 11/23/90, 8/23/91, 8/30/91, 11/8/91-8/95). I do not pretend to cite to each reference to welfare or poverty in all the Right's publications, but rather to document trends. 6 Michael Lind, Up From Conservatism: Why the Right is Wrong for America 76 (1996) ("the ideology of the grass-roots right has hardly changed since the 1950s"); Newt Gingrich, Window of Opportunity 84-115 (1984) (attacking the foundations of "welfare-state liberalism -- a zero-sum redistributionist perspective, resistance to change, cultural relativism, high taxation, and overregulation"). 8 Himmelstein, supra footnote 4, at 65-79 (in discussing the Old Right, states that whether embracing the concept of a literal communist conspiracy such as the John Birch Society did, or viewing the problem as a "liberal political culture," "all conservatives had the same enemy--the liberal establishment.") Id. at 68. 9 Lucy A. Williams, Race, Rat Bites and Unfit Mothers: How Media Discourse Informs Welfare Legislation Debate, 22 Fordham Urban L.J. 1159 (1995). 10 1996 Green Book, supra note 2, at 474. 11 1996 Green Book supra note 2, at 473, 475. 12 1996 Green Book, supra note 2, at 1233. 13 Staff of House Committee on Ways and Means, 103rd Cong., 2nd Sess., Overview of Entitlement Programs: Background Material and Data on Programs Within the Jurisdiction of the Comm. on Ways and Means 442 (1994) [hereinafter 1994 Green Book]. This chart was not contained in the 1996 Green Book. 14 Gordon W. Blackwell & Raymond F. Gould, Future Citizens All 37 (1952). 15 Greg Duncan & Martha Hill, Welfare Dependence Within and Across Generations, Science, Jan. 1988, at 467, 469. 16 1996 Green Book, supra note 2, at 473. 17 U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Aid to Families With Dependent Children: Characteristics and Financial Circumstances of AFDC Recipients 42 (1992). 18 Kristen A. Moore, et al., "Choice and Circumstance: Racial Differences in Adolescent Sexuality and Fertility" 12 (1986). 19 1996 Green Book, supra note 2, at 1190. 20 U.S. Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 75 (1996). 21 U.S. Bureau of the Census, supra note 20, at 79. 22 Over the last 10 years, the proportion of never-married mothers who did not graduate from high school has decreased, while the proportion of such mothers with post-secondary education has risen. Bureau of the Census, Current Population Report, P20-470, Fertility of American Women (June 1992). 23 1996 Green Book, supra note 2, at 1179. 24 Sharon Parrot & Robert Greenstein, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Welfare, Out -of-Wedlock Childbearing and Poverty: What is the Connection? 6 (1995). 25 U.S. Bureau of the Census, supra note 20, at 79 (only 37.5% of all births to unmarried women were to African-American women, down from 54% in 1970). 26 Fifty-one percent of all adolescent mothers did not receive AFDC during their initial five years of parenting. Congress of the United States, Congressional Budget Office, Sources of Support for Adolescent Mothers 52 (1990). And of those who do apply for AFDC, the average teen mother stays on the welfare rolls only one year longer than mothers in their twenties. 1996 Green Book, supra note 2, at 508. Forty percent of single adolescent mothers left AFDC within one year, and 70% within four years of giving birth. Sources of Support for Adolescent Mothers, supra, at xvi. 27 Edward Berkowitz and Kim McQuaid, Creating the Welfare State: The Political Economy of Twentieth-Century Reform 26 (1980); Joel F. Handler, The Transformation of Aid to Families With Dependent Children: The Family Support Act in Historical Context, 16 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change 457, 470-472 (1987-88). 28 Wyman v. James, 400 U.S. 309 (1971). In his majority opinion deciding that New York's home visit regulations under the AFDC program were constitutional, Justice Blackmun recites facts that have little to do with the question of the constitutionality of the regulations, but imply that Mrs. James was a bad mother whom the state needed to watch over. See further discussion of Wyman in Thomas Ross, The Rhetoric of Poverty: Their Immorality, Our Helplessness, 79 Geo. L.J. 1499, 1522-25. 29 Mimi Abramovitz, Regulating the Lives of Women: Social Welfare Policy from Colonial Times to the Present 226-27 (1989); Michael B. Katz, In the Shadow of the Poorhouse 211-12 (1986). 30 Mothers themselves were not covered by the program until 1950. Social Security Act Amendments of 1950, Pub.L. No. 81-734, § 323, 64 Stat. 477, 551 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 606 (1989)). 31 "Alabama denied AFDC payments to the children of any mother cohabiting in or outside her home with a single or married able-bodied man; in Louisiana, any home in which an illegitimate child was born subsequent to the receipt of public assistance was considered unsuitable, and the children in that home were denied benefits." King v. Smith, 392 U.S. 309, 311, 322 (1962). 32 Abramovitz, supra note 29, at 318-19, 323-27; Michael B. Katz, The Undeserving Poor 253 (1989); Frances Fox Piven & Richard A. Cloward, Regulating the Poor: The Functions of Public Welfare 138-145 (1971); Winifred Bell, Aid to Dependent Children 34-35 (1965); Charles A. Reich, Individual Rights and Social Welfare: The Emerging Legal Issues, 74 Yale L.J. 1245, 1246-51 (1965); Charles A. Reich, Midnight Welfare Searches and the Social Security Act, 72 Yale L.J. 11347 (1963) 33 Winifred Bell, supra note 32, at 34-35. See also infra text accompanying notes 94-99 discussing how African American women have historically been in wage work. 34 Katz, supra note 32, at 267. 35 Joel F. Handler & Yeheskel Hasenfeld, The Moral Construction of Poverty: Welfare Reform in America 117-18 (1991). The states' power to legislate morality through the categorical and financial eligibility requirements of the AFDC program was curtailed in Lewis v. Martin, 397 U.S. 552 (1970) (invalidating regulation allocating to mother for purposes of AFDC income of man who shares her home with no legal obligation of support), and King v. Smith, 392 U.S. 309 (1968) (invalidating Alabama's practice of disqualifying from AFDC any mother cohabiting with a man who was not obligated to provide support). 36 Irwin Garfinkel & Sara S. McLanahan, Single Mothers and Their Children: A New American Dilemma 55-57 (1986). 37 James Allen Smith, The Idea Brokers: Think Tanks and the Rise of the New Policy Elite 167-74 (1991). The American Conservative Union was founded in 1964 as a training ground for future political leaders "specifically to institutionalize the Draft Goldwater movement." Crawford, supra note 4, at 8-9. See Political Research Associates, Conceptualizing the U.S. Political Right 5 (1993) for proposition that the New Right coalition developed between 1964-1972 (hereinafter Conceptualizing). 38 Connected to this critique was opposition to the graduated income tax, which in financing social programs was "an unnatural attempt to penalize the frugal and talented for the benefit of the incompetent and the slovenly." Jonathan Martin Kolkey, The New Right, 1960-1968 with Epilogue, 1969-1980 53 (1983). 39 Kolkey, supra note 38, at 53. 40 Kolkey, supra note 38, at 43-73. 41 Friedrich A. Hayek, The Road to Serfdom, 13, 24 (1944). See Himmelstein supra note 4, at 43-60 for a discussion of post-World War II fusionism that united economic libertarianism, social traditionalism, and militant anti-communism under the conservative banner. 42 Blue Book of the John Birch Society, 37-38 (1959). While the JBS is widely viewed as a marginal "extremist" group, sociological research has indicated that the group was largely composed of relatively prosperous and well educated professionals who worked closely with the right wing of the Republican Party. See especially Sara Diamond, Roads to Dominion 51-65 (1995); Charles Jeffrey Kraft, A Preliminary Socio-Economic and State Demographic Profile of the John Birch Society (1992). 43 Barry Goldwater, Wanted: A More Conservative GOP, Human Events, Feb. 18, 1960, Section II, at 2 ("programs of the welfare staters are ... an assault upon the dignity of the individual--designed to rob him of his independence, lessen his ability and his will to be self-sufficient, limit his opportunity, guide and determine his course in this world."); Goldwater, The Conscience of a Conservative 69 (1960) ("The collectivists have not abandoned their ultimate goal--to subordinate the individual to the State--but their strategy has changed. They have learned that Socialism can be achieved through Welfarism quite as well as through Nationalization."). 44 Human Events, supra note 43, Section 2, at 1. See also Ezra Taft Benson, The Red Carpet 168, (1962) ("History teaches that when individuals have given up looking after their own economic needs and transferred a large share of that responsibility to the government, both they and the government have failed."). 45 Weekly Crusader, April 17, 1964 at 6. "The communist conspirators consider the welfare state-type of government which we now have as a preliminary step to socialism which is the immediate preceding step to communism." Destiny, May, 1961 at 101, 118. Cross and Flag, September,1962 at 25. 46 John Birch Society Bulletin, September, 196l at 6. 47 "Goldwater Hails Newburgh Plan as Welfare Ideal for all Cities," New York Times, July 19, 1961, at A1. 48 Kolkey, supra note 38, at 133-34, 156-58 (particularly emphasizing African Americans "relatively poor record for enterprise and initiative in areas important to Western Civilization," citing to Citizen, Oct. 1962, at 8). 49 Kolkey, supra note 38, at 54, citing to Rockwell Report, February 1, 1963, at 4. 50 Marilyn R. Allen, Kingdom Digest, August, 1960, as quoted in the Beacon-Light Herald, March-April 1961, at 33 ("All official statistics prove the uncleanness of the Negro race as a race, both as to contagious disease, sex lust, and criminal inclinations." Id.). 51 Barry Goldwater, supra note 43, at 73. 52 See Jan Nederveen Pieterse, White on Black, Images of Africa and Blacks in Western Popular Culture 30-51 (1990). 53 Kolkey, supra note 38, at 51-2, citing to Dan Smoot Report, July 7, 1965, at 183 ("The criminals and the drones feed and flourish on the bounty which productive citizens are forced to provide. When tax consumers so overwhelmingly outnumber tax producers that they control all elections and politicians, it will be too late to save our civilization."). 54 Manchester Union Leader, as quoted in Destiny, Dec. 1962, at 244 ("constant pandering to the negro vote"); Kolkey, supra note 38, at 158, citing to Storm Trooper, Sept.-Oct. 1964, at 31 ("almost every last one of our cowardly, demagogic politicians kisses black fannies for Black votes."). 55 Paul Sexson and Stephen Miles, Jr., The Challenge of Conservatism 143 (1964). 56 Kolkey, supra note 38, at 89-90. 57 Text of Goldwater's Speech Formally Opening Presidential Campaign, New York Times, September 4, 1964, at A12. 58 Charles Mohr, Goldwater Links the Welfare State to Rise in Crime, New York Times, September 11, 1964, at A1. 59 Crawford, supra note 4, at 6, 46-47, noting Viguerie's use of Goldwater mailing list to do direct mail. 60 Under Goldwater's candidacy, the Republican ticket had carried five Deep Southern states (Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina) for the first time since Reconstruction. Kolkey, supra note 38, at 252. Part of this portrayal was that Northern liberals had single-handedly created the racial crisis in the South. William D. Workman, The Case for the South viii (1960) ("white folks and colored folks, have lived together in peaceful co-existence in the South for a long time, and can continue to do so to their mutual advantage if the pressures are removed"). See also Lind, supra note 6, 119-37 for a fuller discussion of the Southern strategy. 61 Kolkey, supra note 38, at 252. 62 Id. Note how the religious right was engineered from above by Howard Phillips and Richard Viguerie as they saw the "potential of white southern Protestants and northern white Catholics as allies of the New Right." Lind, supra note 6, at 76-77. 63 Human Events routinely reports news out of Washington, DC. The most basic theme in this publication is that the federal government was given limited powers under the Constitution; in overstepping their constitutional powers, they interfere with state and local power and the rights of individuals. The threat of communism is regularly invoked, particularly in conjunction with increased support for military spending and private industry. 64 Johnson's State of the Union Message Endangers Freedom and Individuality, Human Events, Jan. 23, 1965, at 9. 65 Representative Richard H. Poff, Poverty and the Administrator's Heart, Human Events, Feb. 13, 1965, at 13. 66 Ted Lewis, Shriver Uses Slick Propaganda to Sell "Poverty" to Congress, Human Events, May 1, 1965, at 10 (using money to create slick promotional literature for Head Start); Detroit Poverty Program Under Fire, Human Events, June 5, 1965, at 3 ("few concrete gains can be found at the poverty level"); Ted Lewis, Shriver's Poverty War, Human Events, July 3, 1965, at 14 ("a lot of money is being tossed around indiscriminately on an emergency basis."). 67 Poverty Commanders Strike it Rich, Human Events, March 27, 1965, at 6; Fulton Lewis, Jr. High Paid Poverty Army, Human Events, April 10, 1965, at 14; Ken Thompson, High Pay for "Poverty" Warriors, Human Events, May 8, 1965 at 3; Poverty "Aid" Comes to Gum Springs, Human Events, May 29, 1965 at 6. 68 Anti-Poverty War, Human Events, April 24, 1965 at 5, (Chicago anti-poverty program provides Democratic patronage); Representative Clarence Brown, Poverty Waste, Human Events, May 15, 1965 at 15 (patronage in many cities). 69 Henry Hazlitt, Life and Death of the Welfare State, Human Events, Jan. 4, 1969 at 5, 12. Note the contemporary reincarnation of this suggestion in Jeff Jacoby, Making It Too Easy to Vote, Boston Globe, July 18, 1996 at A15. 71 Business Wages Private War on Poverty and Unemployment, Human Events, May 22, 1965 at 12. The government should not be implementing the War on Poverty when the gold supply is dwindling. And by interfering with importing Mexican bracero labor, the United States Department of Labor caused the California business investment decline. Id. 72 Thus the bill to provide economic assistance to depressed areas in the eleven state Appalachian region "approaches the problem of poverty with the idea that job creation and economic recovery can best be accomplished by government pump-priming," rather than recognizing that the "primary blame" should be placed on "the fact that a lot of Appalachia's people simply don't want to work" because they can get just as much money from governmental benefit programs. Ken Thompson, Report on Appalachian Front, Human Events, Feb. 20, 1965 at 10. See also, The Ten Pillars of Economic Wisdom, Human Events, Jan. 11, 1969 at 13. 73 Howard Kershner, Thrift Helps Conquer Poverty, Human Events, Feb. 13, 1965 at 14. 74 Government Encouraging Dropouts? Human Events, March 6, 1965 at 14. 75 Jenkin Lloyd Jones, The "Bum" Factor in Welfare, Human Events, May 22, 1965 at 8. 76 Alice Widener, Something for Nothing Costs Taxpayers Billions, Human Events, Jan. 23, 1965 at 15. 77 Jones, supra note 75 ("But when an effort was made to recruit Los Angeles reliefers to help get in the California truck-garden crop this winter, there were few takers. And one Florida grower, who brought jobless New Yorkers down to his farms at his own expense, found to his dismay that most of them took off for the beaches."). In tension with these messages, many of the articles also articulated an underlying concern for the poor and support for alternative programs which would improve their condition. Representative Jack Edwards, War on Poverty, Human Events, June 26, 1965 at 15 ("I would certainly support a program which can effectively improve poverty conditions."); Representative Barber Conable, Poverty Problems, Human Events, July 3, 1965 at 15 ("...I think there are many worthwhile parts of [the War on Poverty]. A billion, or two billion, or three billion dollars applied to the problem of poverty...is going to have some impact somewhere."). 78 Representative Bill Brock, OEO "Incidents," Human Events, Sept. 16, 1967 at 15 (poverty funds in Tennessee finance "liberation school," "that police say teaches Negro children to hate whites."); Poverty Battle, Human Events, Nov. 4, 1967 at 4 ("...the OEO tacitly acknowledged that it permits deep-dyed radicals of the militant left variety to help control the community action programs."); More Poverty Scandal, Human Events, Nov. 11, 1967 at 4 (Senate Permanent Investigations subcommittee "heard testimony that `Black Power' militants seized control of a $600,000 anti-poverty project in Houston, Tex."); Chicago OEO Has Appointed Ousted Georgia Poverty Aide, Human Events, July 6, 1968 at 13 (Charles D. Hughes, Jr. appointed as executive director of the Cook County (Chicago) Office of Economic Opportunity, had headed ACTION, Inc. in northern Georgia which "apparently became a center of `hate-whitey' agitation."). 79 Representative Edward J. Gurney, Needed Poverty Probe, Human Events, Feb. 12, 1966 at 15 ; Poverty Warriors Sell Insurance, Human Events, Feb. 12, 1966 at 16 (criticizing the part-time hiring of senior citizens to do outreach to other seniors explaining Medicare insurance); Capital Briefs, Human Events, Sept. 23, 1967 at 2 (reporting a contract to train Good Humor ice cream vendors); Capital Briefs, Human Events, March 23, 1968 at 2 (Appalachia Regional Commission to build park including golf course, bird sanctuary, swimming pool and ice-skating rink in Robert Kennedy's home state of New York with anti-poverty funds allocated to help poverty-stricken factory and farm workers); Detailing the Poverty Scandal, Human Events, July 6, 1968 at 13 ("In the poverty program, most of the money goes to bureaucrats, leechers, revolutionists and just plain crooks--not to the deserving poor."); New York Poverty Scandals, Human Events, Jan. 25, 1969 at 4; Gen. Thomas A. Lane, Hunger Headlines Launch Latest Fraud, Human Events, April 5, 1969 at 6; Rep. H.R. Gross, Chicago's Poverty, Human Events, April 26, 1969 at 15; N.Y.'s Shocking Welfare Scandal, Human Events, Oct. 4, 1969 at 5 (91,000 ineligibles receiving AFDC in New York). 80 Capital Briefs, Human Events, Sept. 3, 1966 at 2. Anti-poverty employees are reported as participating in street demonstration, including a Neighborhood Youth Corps employee who is quoted as being paid to participate. Id. The Strange Case of the Telescopic Sights, Human Events, Sept. 2, 1967 at 9 (reporting purchase of high-powered rifle scopes by Houston anti-poverty agency, and stating that "in several cities employees of the `War on Poverty' outfits have acted as agitators in major riots and insurrections..."). George Wiley, director of the Poverty Rights Action Center, is quoted as stating, "If this country does not listen to poor people after what happened in Detroit and Newark and New Haven, you haven't seen nothing yet." Welfare Recipients Stage Noisy Washington Rally, Human Events, Sept. 9, 1967 at 8 (hereinafter Welfare Recipients). Capital Briefs, Human Events, Sept. 23, 1967 at 2. 81 LeRoi Jones, director of Black Arts Repertory Theater in Harlem which received a federal anti-poverty grant, is quoted as likening whites to a cancer which should be killed (Capital Briefs, Human Events, Feb. 5, 1966 at 5), is indicted for assault (Capital Briefs, Human Events, Sept. 24, 1966, at 2), and is convicted of illegal possession of weapons during the Newark, NJ riots along with the chief accountant for Newark's anti-poverty agency (Capital Briefs, Human Events, Nov. 18, 1967 at 2, saying that Jones received "lavish" funds from OEO). Representative Paul Fino criticized "bags of tricks like `rent supplements' and poverty funds that wind up bankrolling black nationalists." Representative Paul Fino, Social Planning Gimmicks, Human Events, Feb. 5, 1966 at 15. Washington National Center for Community Action Education, headed by James Farmer, (pacifist, CORE ex-director, liaison with Black Muslims and Deacons of Defense) and Floyd McKissick (militant black nationalist and socialist) receives funding. Farmer Heads New Center: A $50-Million Poverty Acorn, Human Events, Feb. 26, 1966, at 12. Dr. Martin Luther King, a director of the Center, is reported as currently residing in a redecorated Chicago slum, while fighting slum conditions. Id. (emphasis added). OEO funded "The Community Alert Patrol," "a loose federation of black militants and civil rights leaders," most of whom had police records, "to observe and record instances of `poor police procedure in Watts.'" Anti-Poverty Battle, Human Events, June 10, 1967, at 4. H. Rap Brown, under indictment on a federal fire-arms charge and Maryland charge of inciting to riot, and who told a Negro crowd that "[t]he only way to defend yourself is to go and get some guns," was a neighborhood worker for one year with the United Planning Organization, a DC anti-poverty agency. This article was placed directly next to a report that pro-communist revolutionary Stokely Carmichael dates white women. Capital Briefs, Human Events, Sept. 9, 1967 at 2; Capital Briefs, Human Events, July 13, 1968, at 2 (anti-poverty funds given to Soul, Inc., a coalition of youth gangs in Gary, Indiana, headed by a convicted felon); Nixon Opens Up OEO Files, Human Events, April 19, 1969 at 3 (OEO funds "extreme revolutionaries," Black Panthers, and "violent black racists."). 82 Lavish Welfare Schemes Ahead, Human Events, Sept, 2, 1967 at 8. 83 Id. See also Welfare Recipients, supra note 80 at 8. 84 Brock, supra note 78 at 591; Capital Briefs, Human Events, Sept. 23, 1967 at 2; Poverty Warriors Deep in Politics, Human Events, Nov. 18, 1967 at 3 ("While organized labor concentrated its efforts for Tate [Democratic Mayor of Philadelphia] in low and middle-income white areas, anti-poverty officials were stumping for the mayor in Negro neighborhoods."). Remember one ongoing theme articulated by certain factions of the Right is the withdrawal of the franchise for those receiving welfare. Supra note 69 and infra text accompanying notes 140-142. 85 Gen. Thomas A. Lane, Socialism to Blame for Much of World's Poverty, Human Events, Jan. 14, 1967 at 6 ("Competitive capitalism takes the keys to production from the government and hands them to the people."). See also Crawford, supra note 4 at 208-10 (government social spending "sap[s] the soul of society"). 86 Sedition Case Dismissed, Human Events, Sept. 23, 1967 at 4 (reporting that sedition indictment of poverty program organizer had been quashed because of a finding of unconstitutionality of the statute, although the grand jury had charged that a "well-organized and well-financed effort is being made to promote and spread the Communistic theory"); OEO Against Flag Pledge?, Human Events, Sept. 9, 1967 at 4 (reporting that Head Start program was discontinuing pledge of allegiance as part of its youth program); Capital Briefs, Human Events, July 6, 1968 at 2 (Offices of poverty program in New York are lined with pictures of Karl Marx, LeRoi Jones, and "advocate of violence" Tom Hayden); Reds Use OEO, Human Events, July 20, 1968 at 4 ("Appearing before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, [Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Ed] Montgomery told how Cassandra Davis, Midwest representative of the W.E.B. Dubois Clubs, and Roscoe Proctor, Communist party functionary, used OEO-financed facilities to raise money to send demonstrators to the Poor People's Campaign in Washington"). 87 Paul Harvey, Can Poor Run Poverty War?, Human Events, Feb. 19, 1966 at 123 ("Sargent Shriver's `Advisory Council' for the `War on Poverty' includes a Chicago mother of 11 children whose only income is her $280 monthly Aid to Dependent Children payments. Mrs. Gladys Kyles says, `I guess this makes me an expert on poverty.' Does it? The fact that you may have measles does not make you a doctor."). 88 Alice Widener, All Discipline Lacking: Employer Has Sad Experience With Poverty Program Trainee, Human Events, June 24, 1967 at 10. See also, Jenkin Lloyd Jones, Tough for the Able, Too, Human Events, June 24, 1967 at 11 (because of taxation for welfare, only two classes that can have all the children they wish are the rich who can afford them and the poor who are supported by welfare). 89 Alice Widener, The Problem of Philanthropy by Law, Human Events, Oct. 4, 1969, at 14 (comparing Frederic Bastiat's treatise, The Law (law should function only to guarantee an individual right to protect self and property) to government provision of welfare which results in the stealing (i.e., taxation) of the author's income to support children "of whom 85 per cent are born out of wedlock to mothers under 35 years of age."). 90 Ralph de Toledano, Who's Starving in Mississippi? Human Events, Sept. 16, 1967 at 10 (erroneous Ford Foundation study on Negroes starving in Mississippi being used as political weapon "to detriment of interracial peace"); John B. Parrish, Poverty in America: The Myth and the Reality, Human Events, July 13, 1968 at 8 (claiming that poverty is declining, nonwhites are moving into the middle class, and, for those African Americans who are not, the reasons are that these families are younger, larger and female headed. If these three sociological factors holding back African Americans could be removed, "there would be a sudden and dramatic upsurge in economic status of Negro families, relative to white. It would permit almost all of the Negro families now held back in poverty to join with the more favored Negroes in the successful race out of poverty and into affluence.... [T]he people who still remain in poverty in America today, other than the aged and the ill, are those suffering the consequences of broken homes and excessive child bearing which tends to become self-perpetuating. The evidence on this point is devastating and overwhelming.") Id. at 10. See text accompanying notes 302-309 for Cato Institute's contemporary marketing of dissembling information on the benefit levels received by recipients. 91 "Instant Welfare" Next? Human Events, Nov. 18 1967, at 3-4. 92 See Ronald Reagan's California gubernatorial inaugural address in which he was able to maintain a humane tone and express compassion for the deserving poor, while focusing on private industry as the solution. The Creative Society: "The Path We Chart Is Not An Easy One," Human Events, Jan. 28, 1967 at 12-13. 93 Kolkey, supra note 38, at 5, 53-54, 64. 94 Bureau of the Census, U.S. Department of Commerce, Current Population Reports, Consumer Income, Series P-60, No. 178, Workers With Low Earnings: 1964 to 1990 17 (1992). 95 Handler & Hasenfeld, supra note 35. 96 Phyllis Schlafly, Essays on Feminism Versus Feminine, Phyllis Schlafly Report, Dec. 1982 at 1-4 (hereinafter Essays); Facing the Future: Family vs. Feminism, Phyllis Schlafly Report, April 1990 at 1 (hereinafter Facing the Future). 97 Judith Olans Brown, Lucy A. Williams, and Phyllis Tropper Baumann, The Mythogenesis of Gender: Judicial Images of Women in Paid and Unpaid Labor, 6 UCLA Women's L.J. 457 at 477-486 (1996). 98 Thus Senator Russell Long stated:
Social Security Amendments of 1967: Hearings on H.R. 12080 Before the Senate Finance Committee, 90th Cong., 1st Sess., 1127 (1967). "We are not going to continue to put Federal funds into States for the benefit of parents when they refuse to get out of that house and try to earn something." 113 Cong. Rec. 23,053 (1967) (statement of Rep. Mills). "[W]e can move certain people off the rolls and make room for deserving people who may have to come on through work training provisions of the act." 113 Cong. Rec. 23, 059 (1967) (statement of Rep. Carey) (emphasis added). Senator Long referred to protesting welfare mothers as "Black Brood Mares, Inc.," stating that, "[i]f they can find the time to march in the streets, picket, and sit all day in committee hearing rooms, they can find the time to do some useful work." Eve Edstrom, Protesting Welfare Mothers Rebuked, Washington Post, Sept. 21, 1967, reprinted in 113 Cong. Rec. 26, 487 (1967). Finally, Senator Long drew the classic Right's distinction between Senate (white) wives and welfare recipients, when he said:
1134 Cong. Rec. 33, 542 (1967) (statement of Sen. Long). 100 "Do you really feel that it is a good idea for a woman with a 400-word vocabulary to remain at home with 13 illegitimate children...?" 113 Cong. Rec. 23, 081 (1967) (statement of Rep. Griffiths).
113 Cong. Rec. 36, 768 (1967) (statement of Sen. Byrd). 101 See 113 Cong. Rec. 33, 543 (1967).
Id. (statement of Sen. Javits). Senator Long responds that the situation in Harlem is what the mandatory work requirement is trying to correct. He then juxtaposes this Black ghetto image with that of the good mother:
113 Cong. Rec. 33, 543 (1967) (statement of Sen. Long). 102 Essays, supra note 96 at 4; George Gilder, Wealth and Poverty 127 (1981). 103 Crawford, supra note 4 at 147, 163; Phyllis Schafly, Motherhood in the Eighties, Phyllis Schlafly Report, May 1985 at 1-3 (hereinafter Motherhood). See also Russ Bellant, The Coors Connection 56 (1991) (quoting Tim LaHaye, husband of Beverly LaHaye who is the head of Concerned Women for America, that child care is a "secular humanist plot to steal the hearts and minds of millions of little children."). 104 Note, however, the complexity of this racism. As opposed to the racism evidenced in the 1940s and 1950s which excluded based on race, this is a movement to restore the culture, values, and behavior of white Christian hegemony in all races. 105 Williams, supra note 3 at 720 n.8. A connected strand is found in the Right's opposition to the relatively easy availability of divorce, which is "a major contributing factor to the so-called feminization of poverty." Free Congress Foundation and Heritage Foundation, Issues '88: A Platform for America, Vol.III at 25-26. Note that men will achieve higher wages if women are not in wage work. The Right's logical "inconsistency" is not limited to women in wage work versus women receiving welfare. Note also the Right's opposition to labor unions, even though this movement restored power to individuals. Crawford, supra note 4 at 28-29, 220-221. 106 Scholars have dated the rise of the Neoconservative movement as beginning somewhere around 1976. Conceptualizing, supra note 37 at 5. 107 Crawford, supra note 4 at 174; Peter Steinfels, The Neoconservatives 2-3 (1979).
Barbara Omolade, Village Voice, July 15, 1986 at 26. For a later rendition, see Martin Kilson, Black Social Classes and Intergenerational Poverty, 64 Public Interest 58 (1981). 109 Office of Policy Planning and Research, U.S. Dept. of Labor, The Negro Family: The Case for National Action (1965). 110 Peter F. Drucker, The Sickness of Government, 14 Public Interest 3, 14 (1969) (emphasis added). 111 Edwin Kuh, A Basis for Welfare Reform, 15 Public Interest 112, 116 (1969). 112 Edward C. Banfield, Welfare: A Crisis Without "Solutions," 16 Public Interest 89, 94 (1969). 114 Of course, Nixon was never trusted or embraced by the New Right. Again this report cannot do a thorough analysis of Nixon's policies regarding AFDC, and the role that Daniel Patrick Moynihan played as Nixon's Principal advisor on FAP. 115 Some of the various formulations of a guaranteed income are those of Milton Friedman (1962), Robert Theobald (1965), James Tobin (1965), R.J. Lampman (1967), Edward Schwartz (1967), President Johnson's Income Maintenance Commission (1969), Nixon's Family Assistance Plan (1969), George McGovern (1972), Great Britain's credit income tax (1972), and the United States Department of Health and Human Services Income Supplementation Plan (1974), Martin Anderson, Welfare 133-34 (1978). 116 Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom 191-195 (1962). 117 Ralph de Toledano, Poverty and Social Disorder: Was It Planned That Way?, Human Events, Jan. 11, 1969 at 10. 118 Id. (also including Moynihan's description of a meeting with President Nixon at which he rejected a tax on cigarettes to create jobs and instead highlighted the new "community action programs," which were used by social scientists (such as Professor Richard Cloward) who ran them to "challenge the American system"). 119 Lind, supra note 6 at 5, 80; Crawford, supra note 4 at 187-88. 121 Paul Gottfried, Toward a New Fusionism?, 42 Policy Review 64 at 69 (1987) (discussing the close agreement on social issues between Old and New Right. The Old Right is less inclined to ridicule libertarians as moral anarchists since they speak concretely of dismantling the welfare state; "Old Right may be able to build a political alliance with libertarians, if both sides can disregard their differences on family issues in order to launch a joint assault on the welfare state."; Charles Murray is a libertarian who is also a moral traditionalist who bases much of his brief against the welfare state on its socially destructive effect on the black family; Libertarian Michael Levin criticizes efforts of welfare state to obliterate sex roles.). 123 Lind, supra note 6 at 26-7. 124 Kolkey, supra note 38 at 337-8; Lind, supra note 6 at 55-6. 125 Kolkey, supra note 38 at 341. Note that 1973 was the end of the post-World War II era of high productivity growth. Lind, supra note 6 at 20. 126 In 1975, Richard Viguerie and Howard Phillips created the Conservative Caucus to coordinate activities of "home and family groups." Crawford, supra note 4 at 39. 127 Kolkey, supra note 38 at 313. 128 Kolkey gives an example, the "problem" of African American teen pregnancy (see supra text accompanying notes 281-289 for a debunking of this issue) which highlights the complexity and philosophical tensions both between and within each submovement. As a matter of limited taxation, it would be cheaper to buy birth control for African American teens, rather than provide AFDC for illegitimate kids. But morally, many on the Right would not support that form of government intervention. Kolkey, supra note 38 at 315. In addition, of course, Libertarians would argue nuances of government control over individual lives. 129 Kolkey, supra note 38 at 335. 130 "Workfare" Failed Before, Human Events, Feb. 7, 1970 at 3 (Nixon's FAP "might actually break up poor working families, put some college students on welfare and indirectly finance the purchase of color TV sets.); Demos Eye Welfare Boondoggle, Human Events, Feb. 14, 1970 at 5 (Nixon's FAP "is made to order for the liberals."); Nixon's Welfare Reform Under Attack, Human Events, Feb. 28, 1970 at 1; Moynihan-Garment Duo Fueling Welfare Push, Human Events, Dec. 5, 1970 at 4; Disturbing Trends in Domestic Policy, Human Events, March 6, 1971 at 1; Rep. H.R. Gross, Rising Welfare Costs, Human Events, March 27, 1971 at 23; Conservatives Can Defeat FAP Plan in Senate, Human Events, July 3, 1971 at 1 ("[T]his extraordinary plan...could turn this nation into a welfare disaster area....Passage of this astonishingly radical measure would almost certainly have a devastating impact upon our military preparedness programs as well.") Id. at 5; Nebraska's Carl Curtis, Human Events, Aug. 5, 1972 at 8-9 (lauding how Senator Curtis, "ably reinforced by Gov. Ronald Reagan," brought in an expert witness from the Hoover Institute to Senate Finance Committee hearings, which can be credited with derailing FAP). 131 Rep. Ben Blackburn, FAP Cannot Possibly Bring Real Welfare Reform, Human Events, July 17, 1971 at 12:
Id. 132 Victor Riesel, The Great Welfare, Medicaid Raid, Human Events, March 27, 1971 at 2. 133 Welfare "Reform" Based on Misleading OEO Report, Human Events, Dec. 26, 1970 at 1. 134 Have You Been Saving for One of These?, Human Events, Feb. 21, 1970 at 7 (including as "interesting facts" that "[i]n the last 10 years the government has spent 25 times more money on welfare than on our Lunar Landing Program."). 135 Reagan Points Way to Welfare Reform, Human Events, March 13, 1971 at 4. See also Rep. H.R. Gross, Welfare Reform, Human Events, July 24, 1971 at 15 (lauding Reagan's tightening of eligibility rules); Capital Briefs, Human Events, June 30, 1973 at 2 (lauding Reagan's crackdown on "welfare chiselers"). 136 In fact, the argument was made that FAP was not needed ultimately because rolls began to decrease because of "belt tightening in a number of states." Welfare Figures Undercut Argument for FAP, Human Events, Sept. 11, 1971 at 3. 137 Henry Marshall, The Poverty Peddlers, Human Events, July 17, 1971 at 10. 138 Capital Briefs, Human Events, Sept. 22, 1973 at 2. 139 Robert B. Carleson, Reagan Points the Way: The Real Answer to Welfare Reform, Human Events, April 8, 1972 at 1. See also Morton C. Blackwell, How West Virginia Cut Welfare, Human Events, June 16, 1973 at 22 (discussing how, along with Reagan, West Virginia Republican Governor Arch Moore "has proved that welfare costs can be reduced, that people can be taken off welfare and placed in productive work and that services to those who really need help can be substantially improved."). 140 Henry Hazlitt, Man vs.The Welfare State (1969). See supra note 69 for Hazlitt's previous article in Human Events espousing this concept. 141 Hazlitt, supra 140 at 212. 142 Should Welfare Recipients Be Denied the Vote?, Human Events, Feb. 21, 1970 at 24. See contemporary reemergence of this concept in Jacoby, supra note 69. 143 See critique of an article in Performance, a publication of the President's Committee on Handicapped, entitled Retardation: An Environmental Problem, in which premature births, inadequate housing, lack of health care, and malnutrition are debunked as ways in which poverty fosters mental retardation. The liberal establishment blames things on poverty, rather than people. Marshall, supra note 137 at 10. 144 Capital Briefs, Human Events, Feb. 21, 1970 at 6 (17 employees of anti-poverty project indicted for fraud); A Curious "Anti-Poverty" Grant, Human Events, June 20, 1970 at 6 ($4 million anti-poverty funds used to build a luxurious recreation center); Riesel, supra note 132 at 2. ("There has been some thievery, some appropriation by an occasional revolutionist, bank robbers, and mulcting [sic] by the Mafia."). 145 Al Capp, The Day the Welfare Stopped, Human Events, March 27, 1971 at 12. 146 Capital Briefs, Human Events, June 16, 1973 at 2; Welfare Figures Undercut Argument for FAP, Human Events, Sept. 11, 1971 at 3 ("In Baltimore, officials became suspicious when some recipients began picking up their checks in Cadillacs."). 147 John Chamberlain, An "Alimony Law" for Welfare?, Human Events, June 13, l971 at 17 ("The slum families of 50 years ago may have had their troubles, but they did not suffer the final indignity: they did not become self-perpetuating. Wives and mothers, unable to get on an aid-to-dependent-children list, somehow hung on to their men. Maybe the point is moral, not economic, having to do with attitudes to sex and marriage."). 148 Supra text accompanying notes 102-105. 149 Paul Scott, Radical Child Care Legislation Moves Through Congress, Human Events, July 10, 1971 at 13. 150 Nathan Glazer, Reform Work, Not Welfare, 40 Public Interest 3, 4-9 (1975). See also Frederick Doolittle, Frank Levy and Michael Wiseman, The Mirage of Welfare Reform, 47 Public Interest 62 (1977) (suggesting incremental changes in AFDC, rather than sweeping reform). 151 The Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace (as it is now called) at Stanford University was founded in 1919 with a grant from Herbert Hoover, who in 1960 declared that the Institution's research must "demonstrate the evils of the doctrines of Karl Marx--whether Communism, Socialism, economic materialism or atheism--thus to protect the American way of life from such ideologies, their conspiracies, and to reaffirm the validity of the American system." Smith, supra note 37 at 184-186. In the 1960's, it began also to focus on domestic issues. 30 Group Research Report 1 (Spring, 1991). 152 Anderson, supra note 115 at 69-85, 119. Recall that a guaranteed income had been the centerpiece of Nixon's Family Assistance Plan, see text accompanying note 114. 153 Anderson, supra note 115, at 43, 90-127, 136-40 (Interestingly, Anderson argued that those who reduced their work effort under a guaranteed income program would want to work part-time, that this labor supply would stimulate business to create more part-time jobs, which would then make it easier for wage workers to reduce effort. "This long-run response would reinforce the initial work disincentive on the other side of the market."). Id. at 115-16 (emphasis in original). 154 Anderson, supra note 115 at 149. 155 Anderson, supra note 115 at 154-57, 164. 156 Handler and Hasenfeld, supra note 35 at 160-64. 157 Anderson, supra note 115 at 193. 158 Anderson, supra note 115 at 159-63. 160 Jack Kemp, An American Renaissance 56, 62, 191-2 (1979). 161 Kemp, supra note 160 at 63-64. 162 Kemp, supra note 160 at 36, 61. 163 Kemp, supra note 160 at 5. Kemp, by advocating for a "conservative war on poverty," with increased government spending, was soundly criticized by the New Right for going "soft on the blacks." Lind, supra note 6 at 200. 164 Kemp, supra note 160 at 33. 165 Kemp, supra note 160 at 81. Interestingly, Kemp states that "it runs against human nature to actively contemplate a lifetime on the dole, and I can't recall ever meeting anyone who seriously expressed that preference." Id. In addition, he recognizes racial discrimination and states that "with periods of economic distress far exceeding periods of real expansion in the last dozen years, it is no wonder blacks are so protective of the safety net. Their discouragement must be profound." Id. at 82. 166 Kemp, supra note 160 at 87. 167 See infra text at notes 201, 207-212. 168 The critique of both efficiency and morality is based on an economic determinism, with no articulation of the assumed background rules of what constitutes either efficiency or morality. See criticism of the edited proceedings of a May 1976 conference sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute and the Hoover Institute, Income Redistribution, Marc F. Plattner, The Real Meaning of "Income Redistribution," 50 Public Interest 128 (1978) (critics of redistribution must not focus only on the inefficiency of income redistribution, and forget the immorality of the government taking away what an individual has earned). See also, Marc F. Plattner, The Welfare State vs. the Redistributive State, 55 Public Interest 28 (1979), critiquing Arthur Okun's (Chair of President Johnson's Council of Economic Advisors) Equality and Efficiency: The Big Tradeoff for the Brookings Institute espousing that in spite of its recognition for the "need for unequal incomes as an incentive for greater economic efficiency," it was really incorporating Rawl's "principle of redress:"
Id. at 36-7. "...[T]he redistributionist view, in holding that individuals do not deserve the economic rewards that are the fruit of their own talents and efforts, and that the goods produced by the `honest industry' are instead the `common asset' of society as a whole, totally undermines the moral foundations of private property." Id. at 45. However, Plattner distinguishes redistribution from social welfare programs, which are "legitimate functions of the public sphere, properly supported by public revenues." Id. at 47. Plattner is a Consulting Editor to Public Interest and on the staff of the Twentieth Century Fund, one of the oldest policy research organizations in the United States, founded in 1911 to do scholarly research to promote efficiency. 169 John Bishop, The Welfare Brief, 53 Public Interest 169 (1978). 170 Plattner, supra note 168 at 37. See also Reading Suggestions, 57 Public Interest 127 (1979) (review of article finding that many poor Americans do not support benefit programs because they accept the structure of "positions" and their own position in that structure). 171 Crawford, supra note 4 at 97. The Libertarians, in their "hostility to government, politics, and the organized pursuit of public purposes...not only elevates individual liberty and private property rights above other political values; at its core, it signals a rejection of human abilities to know or plan. It thus offers a radical critique of social science, especially the impulse to transfer the methods and aims of the physical sciences to the study of social problems. The libertarian argument is that the market not only bolsters liberty but is the best mechanism for organizing and communicating knowledge....The libertarian case against governments is that they try to act even though their knowledge is uncertain and that when they act, they distort and obstruct the market mechanisms that can remedy both economic inefficiency and intellectual uncertainty." Smith, supra note 37 at 219-220. See also Lind, supra note 6 at 78-9. 172 Trends, Reason, Aug. 1974 at 38 (most people move in and out of poverty); Winning the Poverty War, Reason, Aug. 1977 at 12 (when one counts in-kind income such as school lunches and Medicaid, poverty has been virtually eliminated). 173 John Hospers, The Two Classes: Producers and Parasites, Reason, Sept. 1975 at 12, 14-15 (government creates poverty by dislocation in economy, and then spends more to "correct" poverty):
Id. at 16; Alan Reynolds, Who Gets What, Reason, Mar. 1978 at 32 ("When you tax effort, you get less of it; when you subsidize leisure, you get more of it.") and 33 ("Should the rest of us underwrite risk taking, through food stamps and welfare for those whose gambles do not pay off?"). 174 Movies, Reason, August 1974 at 37; Rudebarbs, Reason, July 1977 at 48. 175 Trends: Making Them Pay, Reason, Jan. 1976 at 34. 176 Trends: Milestones, Reason, Oct. 1974 at 37. 177 Smith, supra note 37 at xv. 178 Smith, supra note 37 at 197, 279-80. 179 Smith, supra note 37 at 279-80. 180 Walter E. Williams, Government Sanctioned Restraints that Reduce Economic Opportunities for Minorities, 2 Policy Review 7 at 10-19 (1977). 181 Id. at 28. See also Robert A. Nisbet, The Dilemma of Conservatives in a Populist Society, Policy Review, No. 4 at 91 (1978) ("Contemporary conservatives, like their predecessors, also place a higher value upon private property, the free market, and production for profit than do liberals and radicals, past and present.") Id. at 97. 182 "The defense of capitalism needs to be redirected to the values and attitudes of the people, and particularly the re-establishment of economic self-reliance [and respect for private property] as a cherished priority." John A. Howard, The Responsibility of College Trustees, Policy Review, No. 1 at 71 (1977). 183 Melvyn B. Krauss, The Threat of the "New Protectionism," Policy Review, No. 8 at 61, 65 (1979). Thus the vehicle for the "new protectionism," rather than a tariff, is government intervention. 184 Paul Craig Roberts and Richard E. Wagner, The Tax Reform Fraud, Policy Review, No. 9 at 121, 125-126 (1979). 186 Martin Anderson, Why Carter's Welfare Reform Plan Failed, Policy Review, No. 5 at 37, 39 (1978). 188 Morton Paglin, Poverty in the United States: A Reevaluation, Policy Review, No. 8 at 7 (1979). 189 Kenneth W. Clarkson and Roger E. Meiners, Government Statistics as a Guide to Economic Policy: Food Stamps and the Spurious Increase in the Unemployment Rates, Policy Review, No. 1 at 27 (1977). 190 B. Bruce-Briggs, The Politics of Policy Analysis: The Day Care Experience, Policy Review, No. 5 at 41, 48 (1978). 191 Samuel T. Francis, Analysis of Carter's Welfare Reform Proposal, The Heritage Foundation's Backgrounder No. 30, Aug. 8, 1977 at 9. 192 Bruce-Briggs, supra note 190 at 48-54. 193 Francis, supra note 191 at 2. See also Samuel T. Francis, Cost Estimates of the Carter Welfare Reform Proposal, The Heritage Foundation's Backgrounder No. 41, Nov. 11, 1977. 194 Francis, supra note 191 at 3-4. 197 Hobbs was Chief Deputy Director of Social Welfare in California from 1970-2 and a member of the California Governor's Tax Reduction Task Force from 1972-3. Charles D. Hobbs, The Welfare Industry (inside cover) (1978). 198 Hobbs, supra note 197 at 9, 69. 199 Lind, supra note 6 at 2. See also description of this strategy in Right leadership encouraging laid-off steelworkers' anger at big government rather than business. Crawford, supra note 4 at 250-51. 200 The model for his story had been convicted of only $8,000 in welfare fraud (Lind, supra note 6 at 192-3); however, Reagan repeatedly stated that she had used "eighty names, thirty addresses, twelve Social Security cards" in order to be eligible for "veterans' benefits on four non-existing deceased husbands," and other welfare benefits which totaled $150,000 in tax-free income. "Welfare Queen" Becomes Issue in Reagan Campaign, New York Times, Feb. 15, 1976 at A51.
qSmith, supra note 37 at 21-22. For its enduring effect, see Clarence Page, This Drug Crackdown Targets Color, Chicago Tribune, Dec. 31, 1989 at 3 ("...Reagan...put a black and urban face on [poverty] from the time he campaigned against "welfare queens" in 1980 and the stereotypes are reinforced almost daily by television images of ghetto gang wars and drug busts."). 201 Charles Murray, Losing Ground: American Social Policy, 1950-1980 (1984). 202 Gilder, supra note 102. For the book's importance in the Reagan administration, see Thurow vs. Gilder: A Debate, Newsweek, May 4, 1981 at 63; Edwin McDowell, How the Imprimatur of a President can Benefit Authors and Their Books, New York Times, May 16, 1981 at 13; A.O. Sulzberger, Jr., Dole Might Just Prefer His Own Ideas on Tax Cut, New York Times, May 10, 1981; Edwin McDowell, Publishing: A Best Seller for Connell, New York Times, Dec. 28, 1984; John L. Hess, Malthus Then and Now, 244 Nation 496 (1987); Sidney Blumenthal, The Policy Pugilists, Washington Post, April 9, 1987 at C1. 203 Mandate For Leadership: Policy Management in a Conservative Administration, (Charles L. Heatherly, ed.) 1981. 204 Gordon Jackson, All Supply-Siders Now? Policy Review No. 41 at 6 (1987). A portion of Wealth and Poverty was reprinted in George Gilder, The Coming Welfare Crisis, Policy Review, No. 11 at 25 (1980). 205 Gilder, supra note 102 at 127-140. 206 Gilder, supra note 102 at 127-28. 207 A portion of Losing Ground was reprinted in Charles Murray, Saving the Poor from Welfare, Reason, Dec. 1984 at 33. 208 Murray, supra note 201 at 227-28. Lind has noted that Murray symbolizes "the union of political hubris with social science that the original Neoconservatives criticized on the left in the 1960s and 1970s. The harmful influence on public policy of hubristic intellectuals like Charles Murray is the disease for which Neoconservatism once promised to be the cure." Lind, supra note 6 at 62. 209 Michael Tanner, Ending Welfare As We Know It, 212 Policy Analysis 2 (July 7, 1994). Note that Murray describes himself as a "wishy-washy libertarian." Nina J. Easton Merchants of Virtue: By Shifting Their Party's Longtime Focus From Money to Values a Trio of Thinkers Hopes to Win Over the Agenda--and the Soul--of the GOP, Los Angeles Times Aug. 21, 1994 at 16, 20. 210 Robert Greenstein, Losing Faith in Losing Ground, New Republic, March 25, 1985 at 14; Christopher Jencks, How Poor Are the Poor?, New York Review of Books, May 5, 1985 at 41. 211 Smith, supra note 37 at 221. 212 The Manhattan Institute hired a public relations expert to run the "Murray campaign," spent $15,000 to send 700 free copies of the book to "influential politicians, academics, and journalists," booked Murray on talk shows, and paid a $500-1500 honoraria to "intellectuals and journalists influential in policy circles" who attended a seminar on Murray's ideas. Michael B. Katz, The Undeserving Poor 152 (1989); Fred Block et al., The Mean Season: The Attack on the Welfare State 51(1987); Lind, supra note 6 at 179,182; Smith, supra note 37 at 192. Murray is now affiliated with the American Enterprise Institute, after the Manhattan Institute severed its connection with him based on objection to his argument of genetic racial differences in intelligence in his 1994 book, The Bell Curve. Id. at 182. 213 Smith, supra note 37 at 195. 214 Smith, supra note 37 at 196 (The head of Heritage's public relations department stated that this strategy was intended "to create a snowball effect...to have members of the national press corps fighting over the bits and pieces of the study we were ready to release."). Id. 215 Mandate for Leadership, supra note 203 at 27-28, 246 (recommendations regarding the Department of Health and Human Services are contained at 245-306). 217 The preparation and marketing of Mandate is an excellent example of the strategy of certain conservative think tanks to help "to shape a conservative policy elite that could claim that it was capable of governing." Smith, supra note 37 at 203. 218 A concept long associated with Jack Kemp. Robert Shogan, The Right Seeks New Purpose Los Angeles Times, July 4, 1990 at A24. 219 Stuart Butler, Urban Renewal: A Modest Proposal, Policy Review, No. 13 at 96 (1980). See also Paul Johnson, Sick Man of the West, Policy Review, No. 14 at 125 (1980). After discussing how "[r]ace quotas, or positive discrimination, are widely cited by business managers as a primary cause of inefficiency and low morale in the work force," Johnson states:
Id. at 136-38. 220 Daniel Oliver and Phyllis Schlafly in William F. Buckley, Jr., M.E. Bradford, Terry Eastland, Daniel Oliver, Joseph Sobran, Phyllis Schlafly, Paul M. Weyrich, R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr., William J. Bennett, Heaven on Earth, Policy Review, No. 41 at 90, 92 (1987)(emphasis added). 221 Daniel Oliver, Joseph Sobran, Phyllis Schlafly, Id. at 90-92. 222 Oliver in id. at 91 (The modern totalitarian concept of "building a new society" will abolish "not only property and its attendant inequalities..., but religion and the family, too. Law becomes nothing more than the will of the rulers, at the service of their vision, with no back talk from the ruled." Joseph Sobran in id. at 91). 223 Phyllis Schlafly in id. at 92 (recommending that school not start until age seven, so that children under that age would be cared for at home by their mothers). 224 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981, Pub. L. No. 97-35, 95 Stat. 357 [hereinafter "OBRA 1981"]. Sections 2301-2306 affected AFDC recipients who were in wage work. Those sections are codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. 602 and discussed in Handler and Hasenfeld, supra note 35 at 170-176. See the defense of this cut by Ron Haskins and Representative Hank Brown, A Billion Here, A Billion There: Social Spending Under Ronald Reagan, Policy Review, No. 49 at 22, 26-28 (1989). 225 Interestingly enough, predictions that welfare recipients would operate in solely their economic interest and quit their jobs did not prove to be the case. U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO Report B-214752, An Evaluation of the 1981 AFDC Change: Final Report I (1984). 226 Of course, other central principles underlying OBRA were the long-standing Right themes of reducing federal government interference because of its harmful consequences for economic growth, and returning decision-making to state and local government. Haskin and Brown, supra note 224, at 27-28. 227 OBRA 1981 at Sections 2307-09 and Section 2314 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C.). 228 See text accompanying notes 27-28. 229 Haskins and Brown, supra note 224 at 28. In these early days, however, the rhetoric was sometimes more tempered. Not always was the welfare recipient totally blamed, and left to her own devices to move into wage work. "People should be encouraged to use their talents and become productive, self-supporting citizens. Those who do receive public support should work toward independence at the earliest possible moment." Id. at 28. 230 Fred Barnes, TV News: The Shock Horror Welfare Cut Show, Policy Review, No. 24 at 57 (1983) (arguing that media used unrepresentative stories to paint an exaggerated picture of the effects of the cuts and claiming that the cuts had little effect). 231 Pimping for Poverty, XI AIM Report No. 10 at Notes from the Editor's Cuff (May-II 1982). 233 Irving Kristol, Reflections of a Neoconservative: Looking Back, Looking Ahead xii (1983). 235 See generally Sara Diamond, Spiritual Warfare: The Politics of the Christian Right (1989) (noting that Sojourners, a progressive evangelical magazine, "traced the rise of the New Christian Right to the 1974 formation of Third Century Publishers, established for the purpose of promoting books and study guides designed to link a comprehensive conservative political agenda with born-again Christianity.") Id. at 49. 236 Id. at 85. Note that in spite of strong Christian Right women leaders, ideologically women are never to be in leadership positions over men. Id. at 105. 237 It is noteworthy that I found very few references to poverty or welfare in Family Voice published by Concerned Women for America and Phyllis Schlafly Report. 238 Note: the Feb. 1986 issue is a publication of the Rockford Institute. 239 Phyllis Schlafly, Defending the Economic Life of the Family, Phyllis Schlafly Report, April, 1982 at 2 ("Nothing could do more to stabilize the family than an aggressive program to enforce the traditional obligation and function of fathers.") (hereinafter Defending). 240 See generally Phyllis Schlafly, Tax Exemptions for Children, Phyllis Schlafly Report, Nov. 1982 at 1; Essays, supra note 96 at 1; The Decline and Fall of Mom and Apple Pie Phyllis Schlafly Report, Jan. 1985 at 1; Motherhood, supra note 103 at 1-3; Federal Day Care - Sovietizing the American Family, Phyllis Schlafly Report, Feb. 1988 at 1; The Child Care and Career Dilemmas, Phyllis Schlafly Report, April 1989 at 1; Insolvable Problems of Federal Daycare, Phyllis Schlafly Report, July 1989 at 1; Look Who's Lobbying for Federal Daycare, Phyllis Schlafly Report, Jan. 1990 at 1; Facing the Future, supra note 96 at 1. 241 Defending, supra note 239 at 2. 242 The Family: Preserving America's Future, Excerpts from the Report to the President from the White House Working Group on the Family, Phyllis Schlafly Report, Vol. 21, No. 7, Feb. 1988 at 1 ("The essence of modern totalitarianism has been to substitute the power of the State for the rights, responsibilities, and authority of the family."). 243 Relying on Murray's Losing Ground, Schlafly argues that social spending exacerbated poverty, crime, ignorance and discrimination.
The Family's Stake in Economic Policies, Phyllis Schlafly Report, Vol. 18, No. 9 at 1, 3-4, April 1985. 244 Robert Rector, Welfare Reform That is Anti-Work, Anti-Family, Anti-Poor, 603 The Heritage Foundation's Backgrounder, Sept. 23, 1987 at 11. 245 George E. Peterson et al., The Reagan Block Grants: What Have We Learned? (1986); David S. Broder & Spencer Rich, Block Grant Plan Would Replace U.S. Welfare Payments, Washington Post, Aug. 13, 1981, at A1. Linda E. Demkovich, Political, Budget Pressures Sidetrack Plan for Turning AFDC Over to States, 13 Nat'l J. 1671 (1981). 246 Ronald Reagan, Address on the State of the Union 6 (Jan. 27, 1987) (transcript available from the Bureau of Nat'l Affairs, Inc.). 247 For a fuller analysis of the waiver process, see Lucy A. Williams, The Abuse of Section 1115 Waivers: Welfare Reform in Search of a Standard, 12 Yale L & Pol'y Rev. 8 (1994). 248 The White House, The Interagency Low Income Opportunity Advisory Board Procedures for Coordination and Review of State Welfare Reform Demonstration Proposals and Waiver Requests (Nov. 30, 1987). 249 Domestic Policy Council, Low Income Opportunity Working Group, Up From Dependency: A New National Public Assistance Strategy (1986): A centralized system bypasses normal community patterns and support. Federal aid now goes to individuals and households as a right, regardless of their attachment to any community norms or standards. Because the community provides no benefits, it can rarely enforce any mutual responsibility or inspire affections. Id. at 40. A deductively reasoned trajectory of the Old Right position would lead to no taxation, no governmental assistance for poor people, and no intervention in the lives of poor people. But a position that says no governmental control over individuals who wish to preserve "private" property is not inconsistent with a position which supports governmental control over individuals who have been given some of the "private" property of others. [Logical extension really of private control over the poor through private charity, and no taxation for redistribution] Hence the New Right's support of behavior modification AFDC programs, as efforts to control recipient's lives. 250 Steven Garansky & Burt S. Barnow, Demonstration Evaluations and Cost Neutrality: Using Caseload Models to Determine the Federal Cost Neutrality of New Jersey's REACH Demonstration, 11 J. Pol'y Analysis & Mgmt. 624 (1992). 251 Stuart M. Butler, How the White House Spurs Welfare Reform, 705 The Heritage Foundation's Backgrounder, May 4, 1989 at 10. 252 For a summary of the waivers processed by LIOAB during 1987-88, see Michael E. Fishman & Daniel H. Weinberg, The Role of Evaluation in State Welfare Reform Waiver Demonstrations, in Evaluating Welfare and Training Programs 119 (Charles F. Manski & Irwin Garfinkel, eds. 1992). 253 E.g., summaries of all waivers in 1991 and 1992 are contained in Michael Wiseman, The New State Welfare Initiatives 13-18, 30-33 (The Institute for Research on Poverty & The Robert M. LaFollette Institution of Public Affairs, Discussion Paper No. 1002-93, 1993); Jodie Levin-Epstein and Mark Greenberg, Center for Law and Social Policy, The Rush to Reform: 1992 State AFDC Legislative and Waiver Actions 1 (1992); Center on Social Welfare Policy and Law, Report on AFDC § 1115 Applications Submitted to HHS From January 1992-January 1993 (Pub. No. 169, 1993). 254 Lucy A. Williams, The Ideology of Division: Behavior Modification Welfare Reform Proposals, 102 Yale L.J. 719 at 726-41. Note also the ambivalence of even Charles Murray:
Paul Taylor, Welfare Policy's "New Paternalism" Uses Benefits to Alter Recipient's Behavior, Washington Post, June 8, 1991 at A3 (quoting Charles Murray). 255 Sheldon Danziger, Researchers Dispute Contention that Welfare Is Major Cause of Out-of-Wedlock Births, June 23, 1994 (press release on file with author). 0 Gary Bauer, The Family: Preserving America's Future, A Report to the President From the White House Working Group on the Family 24 (1986)(emphasis added). 1 Douglas J. Besharov, What We Know About Targeting Long Term Welfare Recipients and What To Do About It, paper prepared for the Rockefeller Foundation Conference on Welfare Reform, Williamsburg, Virginia, February 16-19, 1988; Don Feder, Poverty: A State of the Human Mind, Conservative Chronicle, March 11, 1987 at 19; Charles D. Hobbs, Mickey Kaus, Charles Murray- a "discussion" moderated by Virginia Postrel, Working on Welfare: How to Reform the System, Reason, April 1994 at 23-39; Jennifer E. Marshall, Observations About America's Welfare Crisis, At The Podium, undated; Robert Rector, Strategies for Welfare Reform, Heritage Lectures, No. 378, April 9, 1992; Robert Rector, Combatting Family Disintegration, Crime, and Dependence: Welfare Reform and Beyond, The Heritage Foundation's Backgrounder No. 983, March 17, 1995; Michael Novak, The Crisis of the Welfare State Crisis, July-August 1993 at 4-7; Michael Tanner, Ending Welfare As We Know It, Policy Analysis, July 7, 1994; Walter Williams, Getting Serious About Welfare, Conservative Chronicle January 7, 1987 at 18. 2 Pub.L.No. 100-485, 102 Stat. 2343 (codified in scattered sections of 42 U.S.C.). 3 136 Cong. Rec. S14,416-17 (daily ed. Oct. 3, 1990)(statement of Sen. Moynihan). 4 Jan L. Hagen & Irene Lurie, The Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, State University of New York, Implementing Jobs: Initial State Choices, Summary Report 6 (1992). 5 Issues '88: Vol. l at 59-61, 226-27. Note the parallel to early Mother's Pensions programs (pre-Social Security Act) which required women to be "suitable mothers" and stay in the home, but did not provide a sufficient amount of benefits to support a family, thereby ensuring that recipients would do sewing or laundry in the home, or take in boarders. Linda Gordon, Pitied But Not Entitled 49-50 (1994). Although Heritage discusses this "right" as a boon to the family, it also refers to the pro-business stance: "the right of employers to hire employees based at home," thereby avoiding unionization, higher wages, and investment in production sites. Bellant, supra note 103 at 61. 6 Robert Rector, Strategies for Welfare Reform, testimony before the Domestic Task Force of the Select Committee on Hunger, U.S. House of Representatives, Apr. 9, 1992, reprinted in 378 Heritage Lectures at 10. 7 Shogan, supra note 218 at A24 (quoting American Conservative Union's David Keene, Heritage's Stuart Butler). See also Richard Cimino, "Religious Right Agenda is Basis of New Party," St. Petersburg Times, July 20, 1991 at 3E (discussing Howard Phillips formation of the U.S. Taxpayers Alliance, with a platform that includes abolishing welfare and replacing it with private charity); Easton, supra note 209 at 18. 8 Shogan, supra note 218 at A24 (quoting Paul Weyrich); Easton, supra note 209 at 16. 9 Easton, supra note 209 at 18 (quoting Charles Murray, William Bennett, and Irving Kristol, and noting that "in their zest to reverse America's cultural slide, they often forget to talk about its parallel economic slide--a steady decline in wages, rising multinational competition, a growing disparity between college graduates and high school dropouts.") Note that Murray advocates for "trying to get the government to stop social engineering among people," simplistically ignoring that government inaction also creates social consequences. Id. at 20. 10 Crawford, supra note 4 at 6, 38-39, 48, 251-2, 272-3, 267; Smith, supra note 37 at 206; Lind, supra note 6 at 76, 78; Senator Thomas J. McIntyre, The Fear Brokers 112-115 (1979). 11 Edward S. Herman & Noam Chomsky, Manufacturing Consent 23-24 (1988) (Heritage Foundation Dr. Edwin Feulner explained that, like toothpaste, "[t]hey sell it and resell it every day by keeping the product fresh in the consumer's mind," i.e., by disseminating the correct ideas to "thousands of newspapers," debate can be confined "within its proper perspective."). 12 Herman & Chomsky, supra note 267 at 27. Remember Accuracy in Media's attack on Bill Moyers, supra text accompanying note 231. 13 Jean Hardisty, The Resurgent Right: Why Now?, 9 Public Eye 1 at 10 (1995). 14 Smith, supra note 37 at 206. 15 Crawford, supra note 4 at 50-51, 165-66, 193-94. 16 Mead in The New Politics of Poverty argues that economic incentives are not enough because the poor lack the competence to take advantage of them. He advocates more authoritarian, mandatory programs such as workfare. Lawrence Mead, The New Politics of Poverty at 161-62, 176-83 (1992). 17 Mead, supra note 272, as discussed in Michael Prowse, Riot's Repercussions: U.S. May Finally Face its Underclass Crisis, Financial Post, May 11, 1992 at 41, and Michael Prowse, American's Poor are Very Different, Financial Times, May 8, 1992 at 16. 18 Katha Pollitt, "Personal Responsibility" For Dads, Too, Boston Globe, Jan. 26, 1995 at A13. 19 E.g., Cato Institute's Bill Nascanon on NPR's Morning Edition, Jan. 3, 1996; Cato Institute's Mike Tanner and American Enterprise Institute's Herb Stein on NPR's All Things Considered, July 12, 1995; Cato's Tanner on CNN's Moneyline, Dec. 29, 1994. 20 E.g., Robert Rector, How to Reform Welfare, Baltimore Sun, July 20, 1995 at 15A; Robert Rector, Resolving the Welfare Debate, Washington Times, July 18, 1995 at A19; William Bennett, Competing Themes in the Welfare Debate, Washington Times, Aug. 3, 1995 at A21; Robert Rector, Welfare is the 800-Pound Gorilla, Los Angeles Times, July 11, 1995 at B9. 21 E.g., the Hudson Institute held a Forum on Welfare Reform and U.S. Foreign Policy (Federal News Service, Sept. 24, 1994) (Founded in 1961, the Hudson Institute is now based in Indianapolis, Indiana.), a Forum on Putting Work First--Creating a Competitive Market for Moving Welfare Recipients into Work (Congressional Press Releases, Jan. 24, 1995); the Heritage Foundation hosts bi-weekly lunch seminars on Capitol Hill, and co-sponsors with Empower America a three-day issues seminar each December for freshmen Members of Congress, their spouses, and Chiefs of Staff. Cite on Web; Kevin Merida, Balancing the Hill, Hearth and Home, Washington Post, Dec. 11, 1994 at A31; The Family Research Council hosts a Washington symposium, World Without Welfare. Reuters Daybook, Dec. 13, 1995; Cato Institute held a Washington forum on Immigrants, Taxes, and Welfare, Reuters Daybook, July 8, 1994. See generally, Crawford, supra note 4 at 266-67. 22 See Senator Dan Coats launching of "The Project for American Renewal" in conjunction with Empower America, to give communities, private and religious organizations more leeway to provide welfare. U.S. Senator Dan Coats, The project for American Renewal (undated); Senator Dan Coats, Congressional Press Releases, Oct. 11, 1995. 23 In testifying before the House Ways and Means Committee in 1995, Hudson Institute's Horowitz set forth these views:
Hearings on Contract with America--Welfare Reform, Before the House Ways and Means Committee, Subcommittee on Human Resources, 104th Cong., 1st Sess. 83, at 84 (1995); Hearings on Consolidation of Block Grant Programs, Before the House Committee on Economic and Educational Opportunities, Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight, 104th Cong., 1st Sess. 23-24, 25-30 (1995) (urging block grants). See also Contract with America--Welfare Reform: Hearing Before the House Ways and Means Committee, Subcommittee on Human Resources, 104th Cong., 1st Sess. 465 (1995) (testimony of Cato's Stephen Moore); Hearings on Broad Goals of Welfare Reform, Before the Senate Finance Committee, 104th Cong., 1st Sess. 1-11(1995) (testimony of Robert Rector of The Heritage Foundation, Michael Tanner of the Cato Institute, Douglas Besharov of the American Enterprise Institute, and Lawrence Mead; Hearings on Welfare Reform Wrap-up, Before the Senate Finance Committee, 104 Cong., 1st Sess. 29-31 (1995) (testimony of AEI's Charles Murray); Hearings On Welfare Reform Proposals, Including H.R. 4605, The Work and Responsibility Act of 1994, Before the House Ways and Means Committee, Subcommittee on Human Resources, 103rd Cong., 2d Sess. 1099-1102 (1994) (testimony of Michael Horowitz of the Manhattan Institute), Hearings on Reforming the Present Welfare System Before the House Committee on Agriculture, Subcommittee on Department Operations, Nutrition, and Foreign Agriculture, 104th Cong., 1st Sess. 504-508, 510-529,5 80-610 (testimony of Heritage's Robert Rector and Hudson's Anna Kondratas). 24 Conservative Forces Buck Reviving Senate Welfare Bill, National Journal's Congress Daily, Feb. 1, 1996. In describing right-wing opposition to a more moderate Republican welfare reform legislation:
Hudson Institute senior fellow, in advising House Republicans, urged the block granting of AFDC. Heritage advocated for proposals in Congress which would deny benefits to unwed teens and would deny additional cash benefits to children born while the mother was on AFDC. John A. MacDonald and Valerie Finholm, In Search of Welfare Plan That Works, Hartford Courant, Feb. 26, 1996 at A1. Representative John Ashcroft, leader in the fight for Phil Gramm's more repressive Work, Family and Community Welfare Replacement Act spoke at the Heritage Foundation as well as on the McNeil-Lehrer News Hour, stating: "Our ability to replace welfare will be viewed by the American people and by history as a measure of our commitment to restoring survival values." Deborah Mathis, Welfare Forces Wedge Between Missouri's Look-Alike Senators, Gannett News Service, Aug. 11, 1995. 25 Charles Murray, The Coming White Underclass, Wall Street Journal, Oct. 29, 1993 at A14 ("[I]llegitimacy has now reached 68 percent of births to black women. In inner cities, the figure is typically in excess of 80 percent."). 26 Easton, supra note 209 at 40. 27 Lind, supra note 6 at 167. See also Murray, supra note 281 at A14. 28 Lind, supra note 6 at 167-71. 29 Claudette E. Bennett, U.S. Bureau of the Census, The Black Population in the United States: March 1994 and 1993, Current Population Reports P 20-480 (1995). 30 Robert Rector, Welfare Reform and the Death of Marriage, Washington Times, Feb. 23, 1996 at A20. 31 Adam Wolfson, Effects of Conservatism on Society, 100 Commentary 115 (1995). 32 Lind, supra note 6 at 175-77. 33 Lind, supra note 6 at 177-78. 34 Easton, supra note 209 at 40 (citing to Murray's presence with David Brinkley, Connie Chung, and on 20/20, and discussion by George Will, Charles Krauthammer, U.S. News' Michael Barone and John Leo, and Newsweek's Joe Klein). 35 Easton, supra note 209 at 40. 36 Easton, supra note 209 at 44 (Bennett is on the evening news, and CNN's Capitol Gang; Kristol is on CNN's Inside Politics, numerous newspapers excerpt from his memos, and Empower America "launches radio ads denouncing Clinton's welfare proposal as `cynical and deceptive.'"). 37 Ronald Brownstein, Washington Outlook: Uncompromising Spirit on Welfare Reform Could be the GOP's Undoing, Los Angeles Times, Sept. 25, 1995 at A5. 38 See Republican challenger Kirk Fordice's victory over Democratic incumbent Ray Mabus in 1991, after Fordice "aired television attack ads with stark images of black welfare recipients." Michael Shanahan, Bush Rhetoric Hits Welfare, Star Tribune, April 26, 1992 at 1A; Klan leader David Duke's election to the Louisiana legislature with anti-welfare rhetoric which "recolored" social problems, Clarence Page, This Drug Crackdown Targets Color, Chicago Tribune, Dec. 31, 1989 at 3. 39 See generally Charles Murray, The Bell Curve, chapters 9, 13, 14, 15 (1994). 42 Dorothy Gilliam, Ugly Ways on the Hill, Washington Post, March 25, 1995 at B1. 43 Williams, supra note 9 at 1159-61, 1186-88. 44 Don Aucoin and Scot Lehigh, Weld Using Story on Welfare Family to Aid his Case on Need for Reform, Boston Globe, Feb. 25, 1994 at 14. 47 Michael Tanner, Stephen Moore, and David Hartman, The Work and Welfare Trade-Off: An Analysis of the Total Level of Welfare Benefits by State, 240 Policy Analysis 3 (Sept. 19, 1995). 48 Tanner, supra note 303 at 13, 16. Women, Infants, and Children's Program provides vouchers for nutritional food supplements to women and children who are determined to be at "nutritional risk." 42 U.S.C. § 1786 et seq.. Because the program has inadequate and capped funding, only a limited number of pregnant women and usually young children at risk receive the benefits. 1996 Green Book, supra note 2 at 927. 49 Tanner, supra note 303 at 11-13. 50 E.g., the Food Stamp level is a higher figure for a family who receives no housing assistance, although the Report assumes that all families are receiving housing assistance. For a full discussion of this miscalculation and analysis of the Cato Institute Report, see Sharon Parrott, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, The Cato Institute Report on Welfare Benefits: Do Cato's Numbers Add Up? (1996). 51 Tanner, supra note 303 at 10-11. In 1996, a National Academy of Sciences panel, in a report on how poverty should be measured, concluded that the value of either government or privately provided health insurance coverage should not be considered income. Constance Citro and Robert Michael, National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences, Measuring Poverty: A New Approach 30, 67-69 (1995). 52 Tanner, supra note 303 at 19-21. 53 Douglas Turner, Pataki Lobbies Washington to Defeat Bill Reducing U.S.; Welfare Aid to State, The Buffalo News, July 13, 1995 at 1A ("Unlike a brief visit Pataki made in February to attend a private dinner party and be a guest on CNN's Larry King show, Wednesday's visit was a high-profile appearance beginning with a speech at the Heritage Foundation..."). 54 Wayne Barrett, Runnin' Scared, Village Voice, Dec. 19, 1995 at A15 and Inflating Welfare, Sacramento Bee, April 8, 1996 at B6. 55 Marshall Ingwerson, Welfare-Reform Sentiment Sweeps Through Statehouses, Christian Science Monitor, March 6, 1992 at 1. 57 Robert Rector and William F. Lauber, America's Failed $5.4 Trillion War on Poverty (1995), discussed in Joan Beck, 12 Steps to Go Cold Turkey Off Welfare, Cincinnati Enquirer, Aug. 3, 1995 at A15; Senator Don Nickles, Daschle Bill Perpetuates Welfare As We Know It, Congressional Press Releases, Aug. 8, 1995. 58 See Representative Don Nickles, Congressional Press Releases, Dec. 12, 1995 (citing to Heritage Foundation study). 59 Matthew Bowers, Warner Welfare Ad: Firm Numbers, Shaky Interpretation, Virginian-Pilot, Oct. 22, 1995 at A5 (The ad reported that "America spends more on welfare than national defense, and over one-half of welfare recipients have been getting it for over eight years."). 60 Lucy Morgan, State's Welfare "Wage" Is Way Above Minimum, Study Says, St. Petersburg Times, Jan. 19, 1996 at 4B. 61 See Hudson's Leslie Lenkowsky's recommendation to abolish welfare, which was then offered as a Democratic amendment to a Republican welfare "reform" bill. Lenkowsky stated that the AFDC program "should not be patched up because it was meant for a much different time;" Suzanne McBride, GOP Turns Down Demo Amendment to Scrap Welfare, Indianapolis News, Jan. 27, 1995 at D02. 62 George Stuteville, Hudson Institute Energized, Indianapolis Star, Jan. 22, 1995 at C01; Ben Rand, Gannett News Service, Jan. 18, 1995 (testimony before Indiana legislature that proposals for welfare cuts did not go far enough); Matt Pommer, Welfare Tagged "Sucking Swamp" at State Hearing, Capital Times, July 13, 1994 at 3A. See also Bonna M. de la Cruz, Analysts Dissect State Welfare Plan, Tennessean, Feb. 18, 1996 at 1A (Cato's Tanner advises Tennessee Governor Don Sundquist, who introduced "welfare reform" including a Family Cap, and a five year lifetime limit with an 18-month limit per stay, to "get tougher." "We should be telling women who have children out of wedlock that they can't be eligible for benefits, period."); Stephen Green, Wilson Assails Dole's Welfare Reform Bill, San Diego Union-Tribune, Sept. 7, 1995 at A-4 (Reporting on Governor Wilson's speech at the Heritage Foundation at which he evoked this image: "The tragedy is not just the 14-year-old girl who becomes an unwed mother...," but that her daughter is likely to become an unwed teenage mother and her son "a 14-year-old triggerman for his teenage drug gang.") Carolyn Lochhead, Wilson Says Dole, Clinton Botched Welfare Reform, San Francisco Chronicle, Sept. 7, 1995 at A2. 63 Heritage Foundation, Annual Guide to Public Policy Experts (Robert Huberty & Barbara Hohback, eds. 1990). Smith, supra note 37 at 202. 64 Michael Dolny, The Think Tank Spectrum, Extra! 21 (May/June 1996). In fact, three of the top four cited think tanks were right-wing, with the American Enterprise Institute and the Cato Institute being third and fourth. Id. See President Should Sign Welfare Reform Measure, Atlanta Journal and Constitution, Dec. 28, 1995 at 18A (In urging President Clinton to sign a bill which would cap welfare benefits at five years, cited to Heritage Foundation study which found that "children raised in families on welfare have cognitive abilities 20 percent lower than children of families off the dole. Working families, it seems, do a better job of instilling values, such as self-reliance, hard work and personal responsibility a [sic] values that are important predictors of later success in life."). 65 Welfare Reform, Herald-Sun (Durham, N.C.) Jan. 14, 1996 at A14; Amy L. Sherman, Michigan Lessons of Looking to God for Welfare Reform, Detroit News, Oct. 29, 1995. See also Mildred Hambleton, Awaiting That Promised (Welfare) Break, Washington Times, Oct. 29, 1995 at B4 (Heritage Foundation receptionist comments on how she pays her "hard-earned wages so millions of others don't have to get up each morning and punch a time clock."). 66 Supra text accompanying note 251 at 3. 67 Ellen Debenport, With Federal Blessing, States Test New Welfare Programs, St. Petersburg Times, Nov. 12, 1995 at 3A. 68 Hardisty, supra note 269 at 3. 69 Jake Thompson, Dole Faces More Trouble in Senate on Welfare Reform, Kansas City Star, Aug. 11, 1995 at A7 (quoting moderate American Enterprise Institute's William Schneider as saying "[i]t's not the Democrats. If the Republicans agreed on a plan, it would have been passed.") (emphasis added). 70 Mark Nollinger, The New Crusaders--The Christian Right Storms California's Political Bastions, California Journal, Jan. 1, 1993. 71 MacDonald and Finholm, supra note 280 at A1. See also the critique by Representatives Talent and Faircloth and Heritage's Rector (Governor's plan is a "total capitulation to welfare-state advocates."). Carl Horowitz, Is Welfare State Here to Stay?, Investor's Business Daily, Feb. 26, 1996 at A1. 72 Gingrich, supra note 6 at 178-181. 73 Gingrich, supra note 6 at 121. 74 Tom Miller, Congress's Conservative Young Turks, Reason, April 1985 at 46. Other Reason articles in this time frame continue to attack the concept of common ownership (James L. Payne, "When the Rich get Richer," Reason, Feb. 1984 at 33, and the mismanagement and unnecessary nature of the Food Stamp Program. David A. Lips, "How to Get Out of the Food Stamp Trap," Reason, August 1983 at 25. 75 Laura Flanders, Why Read the Right? A Feminist Perspective, Extra! 5 (March/April 1995).
77 Of course, the Right also has an economic interest in insuring a steady supply of workers willing to take low-wage jobs. Sumner M. Rosen, The True End of Welfare Reform, Nation, April 3, 1995 at 456; Piven and Cloward, supra note 32 at 34, 209. 78 Michael Kinsley, Class Warfare? Tell Me About It, Time, Feb. 6, 1995 at 80. 79 Jean V. Hardisty, The Resurgent Right: Why Now? unpublished manuscript (1995). 80 Himmelstein persuasively argues that the status politics analysis of conservatism is oversimplified and misleading. Himmelstein, supra note 4 at 72-74. But he recognizes that the common threads of the Old Right included strong support among Republicans, the business community and the affluent. Id. at 74-5. |
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