Nothing Bill Clinton Said To Defend His Welfare Reform Is True

Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and her husband former President Bill Clinton wave to supporters after she was projected to be the winner in the Democratic caucuses  in Las Vegas, Nevada February 20, 2016. REUTERS/David Becker      TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Democratic U.S. pres­i­den­tial can­di­date Hillary Clinton and her hus­band for­mer President Bill Clinton wave to sup­port­ers after she was pro­ject­ed to be the win­ner in the Democratic cau­cus­es in Las Vegas, Nevada February 20, 2016. REUTERS/​David Becker TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Everything Bill Clinton said Thursday to defend his 1996 wel­fare reform law was false.

Clinton claimed that he left the pro­gram with plen­ty of mon­ey for poor peo­ple, sug­gest­ed that it helped reduce black pover­ty and that it was only the mean, nasty Republicans from the George W. Bush era who gut­ted it and hurt the poor. Clinton’s dis­tor­tions of eco­nom­ic his­to­ry and his own record are so out­ra­geous that — you will be shocked — it is dif­fi­cult to believe he was being honest.

Here’s what he told pro­test­ers at a cam­paign ral­ly for Hillary Clinton in Philadelphia:

They say the wel­fare reform bill increased pover­ty. Then why did we have the largest drop in African American pover­ty in his­to­ry when I was pres­i­dent? The largest in his­to­ry. What hap­pened was, all these Republicans got into — the Supreme Court elect­ed President Bush 5 to 4, then all these Republicans took over state leg­is­la­tures. We left ‘em with enough mon­ey to take care of all the poor peo­ple who couldn’t go to work on wel­fare. We left ‘em with the mon­ey they had before the wel­fare rolls went down 60 per­cent. The Republicans took it away, and [these pro­test­ers are] blam­ing me.”

This is not true. Poverty dropped dur­ing the Clinton years not because of wel­fare reform, but because the entire American econ­o­my was being juiced by a mas­sive stock mar­ket bub­ble. No cred­i­ble econ­o­mist even dis­putes this. The Clinton bub­ble was fueled by the aggres­sive finan­cial dereg­u­la­to­ry poli­cies of Clinton and his Federal Reserve chair­man, Alan Greenspan. When the stock mar­ket bub­ble burst, mil­lions of peo­ple who pre­vi­ous­ly would have received wel­fare fell into poverty.

Welfare reform was an inten­tion­al effort to curb finan­cial assis­tance to poor peo­ple, on the grounds that many were sim­ply too lazy to get a job. Clinton turned over a fed­er­al pro­gram to states, which were effec­tive­ly allowed to slash wel­fare fund­ing and impose new work require­ments on peo­ple who received assis­tance. Even Republican co-archi­tects of wel­fare reform con­cede that the pro­gram end­ed up hurt­ing the poor.

In a reces­sion, it doesn’t work,” for­mer GOP staffer Ron Haskins told The Huffington Post in 2012 about the wel­fare reform bill, which he helped shape. “Even in 2001, which was a rel­a­tive­ly mild reces­sion, we saw a lot of these sin­gle moth­ers leav­ing the work­force because they just couldn’t find a job and being forced off the wel­fare rolls.”

Let’s be clear about the time­line here. The econ­o­my went into reces­sion in March 2001, two months after Clinton left office. This was not because George W. Bush had just moved into the White House. It was because Clinton had left the coun­try with a fun­da­men­tal­ly unsta­ble econ­o­my and a social safe­ty net that had been weak­ened by his own bill.

This wasn’t an acci­dent or an unin­tend­ed con­se­quence. The whole point of wel­fare reform was to kick peo­ple off the wel­fare rolls. Clinton had cam­paigned on it in 1992. “When I ran for pres­i­dent four years ago, I pledged to end wel­fare as we know it,” he said on the day the bill passed. “I have worked for four years to do just that.”

In 1996, the year Clinton signed the law, the pover­ty rate was 13.7 per­cent. At the close of 2014 — the most recent avail­able annu­al cen­sus data — it was 14.8 per­cent. But wel­fare rolls have declined rough­ly 70 per­cent, from a peak of 14.2 mil­lion in 1994 to 4.2 mil­lion today.

Maybe that’s because 70 per­cent of the peo­ple on wel­fare were all lazy moochers.Republicans who con­tin­ue to applaud Clinton’s actions sug­gest just that. But even Clinton him­self didn’t make that (ridicu­lous) argu­ment on Thursday. He instead insist­ed that the GOP was to blame for unnec­es­sar­i­ly cut­ting off aid to needy peo­ple, not he.

That’s an aston­ish­ing claim for a bill that — again — was lit­er­al­ly designed to kick peo­ple off wel­fare rolls. Clinton turned over the fed­er­al government’s bud­get­ing author­i­ty for wel­fare to the states and now has the audac­i­ty to argue that he couldn’t have expect­ed them to slash fund­ing. What, then, was the pur­pose of hand­ing them bud­getary power?

Clinton’s sign­ing-day rhetoric about “depen­den­cy” and “respon­si­bil­i­ty” is eeri­ly sim­i­lar to Paul Ryan’s 2012 pover­ty-sham­ing lan­guage about the social safe­ty net becom­ing “a ham­mock.” People who receive gov­ern­ment assis­tance are lazy, the argu­ment goes. It has noth­ing to do with a soci­ety that sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly denies them eco­nom­ic oppor­tu­ni­ties and finan­cial secu­ri­ty. At least Paul Ryan has apologized.

But hey, it was the ‘90s, right? Everyone was doing it? Nope! Poverty advo­cates had plead­ed with Clinton, urg­ing him to veto the bill. Peter Edelman, an assis­tant sec­re­tary at the Department of Health and Human Services, even resigned in protest. His 1997 essay for The Atlantic titled “The Worst Thing Bill Clinton Has Done” is a classic.

Clinton is fab­ri­cat­ing polit­i­cal his­to­ry for a rea­son. His wife, then-first lady Hillary Clinton, was an aggres­sive cham­pi­on of his wel­fare reform agen­da. She is now run­ning for pres­i­dent at a time when the Democratic Party is under­go­ing a mass re-eval­u­a­tion of his pres­i­den­cy. Many of those vot­ers are con­clud­ing that Bill Clinton’s time in office was an eight-year dis­as­ter for pro­gres­sive ideas. And they want to know whether Hillary Clinton still backs the poli­cies that she and Bill Clinton advanced dur­ing the 1990s.

When she sends Bill out on the cam­paign trail and he bla­tant­ly mis­leads his audi­ence to defend his record, it’s hard to con­clude that Hillary Clinton doesn’t still believe in that agen­da. Nothing Bill Clinton Said To Defend His Welfare Reform Is True