What part of 29 out of a hundred welfare recipients are eligible to work in 2009 is it you cannot grasp? How many times must you be told that the majority of public assistance recipients are working poor families, the old, handicapped, and their children. Republicans governors requested the waiver, crafted it and asked for more flexibility in their STATE SPECIFIC plans. Obama gave it to them. The Dufus took it away, or is trying.
Of course I have MORE facts for you!
https://www.newsweek.com/trump-2018-...-reform-614410
IQUOTE] Indeed, when one actually looks at the data from some of these safety net programs, it becomes clear that so-called able-bodied adults are a minority of the participants. For example, 64 percent of those receiving food assistance in 2012 were children, people with disabilities or the elderly,
according to the Congressional Research Service. And 53 percent of those receiving public housing benefits had either elderly or disabled heads of households...
… Even congressional Republicans are criticizing the domestic spending cuts in the president’s budget as “draconian” and downplaying their overall significance. At the same time, however, GOP lawmakers are weighing doing something very similar to Medicaid, the government-funded health insurance program for low-income, elderly and disabled Americans, as what the president is proposing for food assistance. The American Health Care Act that Republicans pushed through the House on May 4 would roll back Medicaid’s expansion under Obamacare, which allowed working-age men and childless women to participate for the first time. Republicans want to return the limits to women with children. The House legislation also would slash federal Medicaid spending by an estimated $880 billion and put the onus on states to cover the rest. Trump embraced that approach in his budget, adding another $600 billion-plus in Medicaid cuts on top of it.
Some Senate Republicans, however, are squeamish about those Medicaid proposals, for the very same reasons that progressives criticize them and other parts of the Trump budget. They worry a rollback in funding and eligibility will hurt their most vulnerable constituents, particularly in states that chose to expand the program under Obamacare. And they want to see a very different version of health care legislation come out of the Senate.[/QUOTE]
And from 2012,
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics...reform/260931/