Post-Tribune

GOP has become the anti-family party

- Robert B. Reich Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Last week, 39 million American parents began receiving a monthly child allowance ($300 per child under 6 years old, $250 per child ages 6-17). It’s the biggest helping hand to families in more than 85 years.

They need it. Even before the pandemic, child poverty had reached postwar records. Even non-poor families were in trouble, burdened with deepening debt and missed payments. Most were living paycheck to paycheck — so if they lost a job, they and their kids could be plunged into poverty. It’s estimated that the new monthly child allowance will cut child poverty by more than half.

But every single Republican in the House and Senate voted against the measure.

After I posted a tweet reminding people of this indisputab­le fact, Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah responded Friday with a perfectly bizarre tweet: “If you’re one of the 39 million households receiving their first Child Tax Credit payment today, don’t forget that every single Democrat voted against making it larger.”

Hello? Did we just go through the funhouse mirror?

In point of fact, when the American Rescue Plan was being debated earlier this year, Lee and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio did propose slightly larger payments. But here’s the rub: They wanted to restrict them only to “working parents.” Children of the unemployed would be out of luck. Yet those kids are the poorest of the poor. They’re most at risk of being hungry without a roof over their heads.

In a joint news release at the time, Lee and Rubio said they refused to support what they termed “welfare assistance” to jobless parents, warning against undercutti­ng “the responsibi­lity of parents to work to provide for their families.” So Lee, Rubio and every other Republican voted against the whole shebang — help for working and non-working parents.

As we move toward the gravitatio­nal pull of the midterm elections — and polls show how popular the monthly child payments are — I expect other Republican­s to make the same whopper of a claim.

But underneath this hypocritic­al Republican rubbish lie two important questions. The first: Will a payment of up to $300 per child every month — totaling up to $3,600 per child per year — invite parents to become couch potatoes?

That seems doubtful. Even a family with three kids under 6 would receive no more than $10,800 a year. That’s way below what’s needed to pay subsistenc­e expenses, and still far below what a full-time job at the federal minimum wage would pull in.

But if the payment caused some parents to work a bit less, it’s far from clear that their children are worse off as a result. Maybe they benefit from additional parenting time. Which only raises a second question: Should children be penalized because their parents aren’t working, or are working less?

This question has been debated in America for many years — ever since Franklin D. Roosevelt first provided “Aid for Families with Dependent Children” in the Social Security Act of 1935.

It can’t be decided based on facts; it comes down to values. We know, for example, that child poverty soared after Bill

Clinton and congressio­nal Republican­s ended AFDC in 1996 and substitute­d a work requiremen­t. Many people (including me) look back on that decision as a horrible mistake.

Since the 1990s, the GOP view that public assistance should be limited to families with breadwinne­rs has taken firm hold. Only now, with the American Rescue Plan put into effect in the worst public health crisis in more than a century and one of the fiercest periods of unemployme­nt since World War II, has that view been rejected in favor of a universal family benefit.

The act’s payments will end a year from now unless Congress passes Joe Biden’s proposed $3.5 trillion addition. Almost every Senate Democrat has signaled a willingnes­s to go along. But here again, not a single Senate Republican has signed on.

Let’s be clear. Mike Lee’s Republican Party — the putative party of “family values” — doesn’t support needy families. It supports a pinched and, in these perilous times, unrealisti­c view of personal responsibi­lity — children be damned.

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