How Welfare Reform Worked

Tuesday, June 6th, 2006

In How Welfare Reform Worked, Kay S. Hymowitz says that the 10-year anniversary of the bill “seems a good time to remember the drama — make that melodrama — that the bill unleashed in 1996″:

Cries from Democrats of “anti-family,” “anti-child,” “mean-spirited,” echoed through the Capitol, as did warnings of impending Third World–style poverty: “children begging for money, children begging for food, eight- and nine-year-old prostitutes,” as New Jersey senator Frank Lautenberg put it. “They are coming for the children,” Congressman John Lewis of Georgia wailed — “coming for the poor, coming for the sick, the elderly and disabled.” Congressman William Clay of Missouri demanded, “What’s next? Castration?” Senator Ted Kennedy called it “legislative child abuse,” Senator Chris Dodd, “unconscionable,” Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan—in what may well be the lowest point of an otherwise miraculous career — “something approaching an Apocalypse.”

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