Lesson plan

Lesson Plan: Welfare and the Politics of Poverty

The federal governmentโ€™s public assistance programs began during the Great Depression in the 1930s; over time, they have become the subject of much political debate. By the mid-1990s, with record numbers of Americans receiving federal assistance, public resentment reached a tipping point. Recipients were stigmatized by some politicians as lazy neโ€™er-do-wells feeding at the public trough. Politicians railed against so-called โ€œwelfare queens,โ€ women thought to be gaming the system by having more babies to be eligible for more benefits. Republicansโ€™ decadeslong efforts to overhaul welfare had met with little success. But in 1996, in a move that outraged liberals, Bill Clinton, a Democrat who had campaigned on a promise to โ€œend welfare as we know it,โ€ signed legislation that did just that.

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