[Congressional Record Volume 142, Number 113 (Monday, July 29, 1996)]
[House]
[Page H8602-H8603]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMMENTS ON WELFARE REFORM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of May
12, 1995, the gentleman from Ohio [Mr. Hoke] is recognized during
morning business for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOKE. Mr. Speaker, I want to thank the gentlewoman from the
District of Columbia. I think she is absolutely right, and I think that
it is time that we try a different approach with the District. We have
seen a failed policy of liberalism that has brought this District to
what it is, and I think it is absolutely appropriate that at this time
in the District's history, we should take advantage of the situation
that we have here, and we should do something that is opportunity-
oriented, that is incentive-oriented, using a different approach, and
see what the results will be. I am absolutely confident that the
results that the gentlewoman is looking for will in fact come about,
and I am going to support her in her efforts. I appreciate the courage
that the gentlewoman has taken to undertake this.
Mr. Speaker, I want to speak about the welfare bill that we dealt
with last week. I want to start out, I came across a number of I think
fascinating quotations from the State of the Union address in 1935 by
Franklin D. Roosevelt. I want to read some of those to you.
Mr. Roosevelt said:
The lessons of history confirmed by the evidence
immediately before me show conclusively that continued
dependence upon relief induces a spiritual and moral
disintegration, fundamentally destructive to the national
fiber. To dole out relief in this way is to administer a
narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the human spirit. It is
inimical to the dictates of sound policy. It is in violation
of the traditions of America. The Federal Government must and
shall quit this business of relief.
This is Franklin Roosevelt in 1935. He goes on to say, ``In the days
before the Great Depression, people were cared for by local efforts.''
Listen to this carefully. It sounds as though it was written for a
speech for the new majority's welfare plan of 1996. Specifically the
idea of sending power out of this city and back to States, communities,
localities, churches, synagogues, et cetera.
He says:
In the days before the Great Depression, people were cared
for by local efforts, by states, by counties, by towns,
cities, by churches, and by private welfare agencies. It is
my thought that in the future they must be cared for as
they were before. I stand ready through my personal
efforts and through the public influence of the office
that I hold, to help these local agencies to get the means
necessary to assume this burden.
Are you listening, President Clinton?
[[Page H8603]]
Local responsibility can and will be resumed for, after
all, common sense tells us that the wealth necessary for this
task existed and still exists in the local community, and the
dictates of sound administration require that this
responsibility be in the first instance a local one.
John F. Kennedy echoed these fundamental insights into human nature
in 1962 when he said, ``No lasting solution to the problem of poverty
can be bought with a welfare check.''
Finally, in 1931, President Roosevelt said, ``The quicker that a man
or woman is taken off the dole, the better it is for them during the
rest of their lives.''
Over four decades ago we launched a war on poverty with the best of
intentions. But $5.5 trillion later we have nothing to show put
poverty, despair, hopelessness, broken families, and a damaged work
ethic. We have ignored the basic law of nature, that when someone is
given handout after handout after handout, without having something
demanded in return, he or she is condemned to a lifestyle of dependency
and the loss of personal dignity and self-worth.
Not surprisingly, this is also the root of a similar problem at the
opposite end of the economic spectrum, children spoiled by affluent
parents who shower them with material goods, but require nothing in
return. This is literally the essence of what it means to spoil a
child. Yet there are also millions of middle class parents everywhere
in America who require their children to clean their rooms, make their
beds, complete their homework, and do daily chores in exchange for a
modest allowance. This teaches responsibility, an understanding that
money is given in exchange for work, and it bonds a child to his or her
family in a relationship of mutual commitment and responsibility.
Congress has just passed a plan that tries to apply the kind of tough
love, common sense approach to welfare reform that Americans know is
morally right and have said that they want. The plan is based on the
simple proposition that welfare recipients should work for their
benefits, just like you work to support your family and to pay your
taxes.
It also recognizes that there will be no real welfare reform without
tackling the appalling problem of illegitimacy. Fully one in every
three American babies is born out of wedlock today.
So I ask the Speaker to commend to the attention of the President
this bill. I hope that he signs it. I hope it becomes law. It will
clearly bode well for the future of our country going into the 21st
century.
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