Baltimore Sun

McGovern asks: ‘What’s wrong with Andy Harris?’

- Dan Rodricks

In an interview last week with Bloomberg Government, Rep. Jim McGovern, a Massachuse­tts Democrat, asked a question for the ages: “What’s wrong with Andy Harris?”

Some of us have been asking that question for more than a decade, wondering why a fellow with a medical degree would vote repeatedly to keep thousands of low-income Americans from getting health insurance; or why Harris, Maryland’s only Republican in Congress, would cozy up to a Hungarian leader one edict away from being a full dictator; or why Harris would oppose honoring police officers who risked their lives to defend the Capitol, where Harris works, from a mob.

I could go on, but I won’t, in the interest of getting to what provoked McGovern to ask, “What’s wrong with Andy Harris?”

McGovern, a member of the House Agricultur­e Committee, was speaking of Harris’ desire to cut SNAP benefits, formerly known as food stamps, to low-income Americans at a time when food prices have risen significan­tly.

Harris recently became chairman of an agricultur­al subcommitt­ee and, in the same Bloomberg report, vowed to cut the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program.

“We have to wring the tens of billions of dollars of money out of [SNAP], which was put in for COVID,” he said. “As many Americans realize, the COVID emergency is over.”

Maybe Harris missed this part, but Congress already voted to end the expanded SNAP benefits ($95 extra per month per household) authorized during the pandemic. The supplement­al benefits are due to expire at the end of the month in Maryland and other states. That’s a provision of the spending bill approved by Congress in December. And guess who voted, along with 200 other House Republican­s, against that spending bill?

Good guess: Andy Harris.

So he’s talking about cutting benefits already due to expire, and in Maryland that will mean approximat­ely $1 billion less in SNAP disburseme­nts to households across the state, according to the nonprofit Maryland Hunger Solutions.

That’s not just a hit to struggling families, but to the food industry, points out Michael J. Wilson, director of the advocacy organizati­on.

So what’s wrong with Andy Harris? Nothing, if you like extremists who make the tired Republican suggestion that too many Americans receive SNAP benefits, or that people should be required to work to get them when, in fact, the Census Bureau shows that nearly 80% of households on SNAP have at least one employed person and a third have at least two people who are working. SNAP serves the working poor.

But calling for cuts makes Harris sound like a hard-heeled moralist against sloth when, actually, he’s a classic denialist about the millions of Americans struggling at the bottom or just above it.

As the new chair of the House subcommitt­ee overseeing funding for the Department of Agricultur­e, Food and

Drug Administra­tion, and other agencies, Harris could toughen SNAP eligibilit­y requiremen­ts for low-income and poor Americans, though the Bloomberg report suggested his powers to change the program will be limited.

Still, Harris has again put himself in position, as he did with Obamacare years ago, of opposing a reasonable government subsidy that helps many of his own constituen­ts.

Who benefits from SNAP?

In 2021 the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in Washington took a deep dive into government data on SNAP and came up with a state-by-state rundown. It found that, in Maryland, 64% of SNAP households have children in them and 38% have older or disabled adults. Nearly 80% of SNAP households had incomes at or below the federally-establishe­d poverty line.

The study found that SNAP lifted nearly 100,000 people, half of them children, above the poverty line in Maryland each year between 2013 and 2017.

But there are thousands more living below or just above the line. According to the most recent estimate from the U.S. Census Bureau, 10.3% of Maryland’s population was considered officially poor. (In Somerset County, within Harris’ congressio­nal district, the rate was more than twice as high, at 23.6%.)

And keep this in mind: While the national poverty rate has fallen, the government’s standard for poverty remains unrealisti­c.

Only last month, when it was published in the Federal Register, did the government-set poverty line hit $30,000 a year for a family of four. The last time I checked, in 2021, a family of four was considered poor if its annual income was $26,500 or less. The new standard acknowledg­es inflation and the recent rise in consumer prices.

Still, no one who lives in the real world and pays real food bills and real rent will consider $30,000 for a family of four the threshold for poverty.

United Way decided to come up with a better measuremen­t, called ALICE.

That stands for “Asset Limited, Income Constraine­d, Employed.” It calculates the minimum costs of a “survival budget” for housing, child care, health care, food, taxes and transporta­tion for working families in Baltimore and 23 Maryland counties. It then determines the number of ALICE hardship households — those that do not earn enough money to meet the costs of living. It’s an examinatio­n of the real challenges faced by the working poor.

In Baltimore, in the last survey, 55% of households were determined to be ALICE households. In Andy Harris’s congressio­nal district, the percentage of hardship households was above 40% in some counties, above 30% in others.

What’s wrong with Andy Harris?

Plenty. But he keeps getting reelected.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., left, talks with Rep. Andy Harris, R-Md., during the 12th round of voting in the House chamber in January. Harris has said he is in favor of reducing SNAP benefits that help many Maryland families.
ALEX BRANDON/AP Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., left, talks with Rep. Andy Harris, R-Md., during the 12th round of voting in the House chamber in January. Harris has said he is in favor of reducing SNAP benefits that help many Maryland families.
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