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Bill Clinton was right
Heritage Foundation ^ | August 24, 2006 | Robert Rector

Posted on 08/24/2006 6:41:04 AM PDT by presidio9

He Saw the Roots of America's Welfare Problem

As a conservative analyst who spent much of the 1990s working against most of Bill Clinton's agenda -- including even some aspects of his welfare reform proposals -- it pains me to say this.

Bill Clinton was right.

He deserves more credit for the passage of welfare reform than most conservatives probably care to admit.

No, Clinton didn't play a major role in shaping the policy details of the landmark 1996 act. But he understood something about policymaking that many conservative strategists and policy wonks could stand to re-learn: It isn't enough to get the technical details of a policy right. Words and symbols matter, too.

Indeed, thanks in large part to his effective use of words and symbols that challenged liberal orthodoxy on issues surrounding the poor, Bill Clinton not only helped "end welfare as we know it," but he helped end welfare as we know it before anyone even knew it.

To fully understand Clinton's role in the passage of this landmark legislation, one must go back to the early days of the 1992 presidential campaign when Clinton first began trying out his welfare themes. According to New York Times reporter Jason DeParle, Clinton regarded his welfare message as the "all-purpose elixir" of his campaign for the presidency.

It was a values message, an economic message and a policy message all in one. And it generated more interest than any other topic Clinton addressed.

A surprising thing about Clinton's welfare message is that it found resonance with many people in low-income neighborhoods. It won Clinton respect from the poor, a group most analysts figured would object strongly to any welfare reform plan.

DeParle reports that in the fall of 1991, Clinton dispatched campaign aide Celinda Lake to North Carolina to conduct focus groups with black voters. The campaign was worried that Clinton's pledge to "end welfare as we know it" might invite Virginia's black governor (and presidential aspirant) Doug Wilder to attack Clinton as a "racist."

Lake found otherwise. "The welfare message, worded correctly, plays extremely well in the black community," Lake reported. Low-income African-Americans were all for cutting welfare, so long as they sensed a corresponding commitment to help them acquire the dignity that comes from gainful employment.

A major turning point in the debate over welfare reform came in late 1993 when Clinton made a series of remarkable public statements about the links between social problems, welfare dependency and unwed childbearing. No president before him had addressed this topic.

It started in Memphis, where Clinton addressed a group of black church leaders. Employing the rhythm, cadence and blunt-spoken hard truths of an old-style sermon, it was the kind of speech that would have caused most white liberals to turn red with embarrassment.

But the audience loved it, repeatedly interrupting with applause.

At one point in the speech, the president imagined what Martin Luther King, Jr. would say if he were "to reappear by my side today and give us a report card."

The slain civil rights leader, Clinton suggested, would say: "'I did not live and die to see the American family destroyed. . . . I fought for freedom, but not for the freedom of . . . children to have children and the fathers of the children walk away from them and abandon them as if they don't amount to anything.'"

Later that day, at another black church in Memphis, Clinton attributed the rise in inner-city crime to four things: "the breakdown of the family, the breakdown of other community supports, the rise of drugs . . . and the absence of work."

Several weeks later, in a television interview with NBC, Clinton admitted that he had found "a lot of very good things" in Dan Quayle's infamous 1992 speech on family values. "I think he got too cute with 'Murphy Brown,'" Clinton said, "but it is certainly true that this country would be much better off if our babies were born into two-parent families.

"Once a really poor woman has a child out of wedlock," he continued, "it almost locks her and that child into the cycle of poverty, which then spins out of control further."

The president went on to note that, contrary to popular belief, this cycle of poverty is not primarily a problem of race. "If you look at the figures for black, two-parent families with children, their incomes are almost three times as high as single white mothers who had their children out of wedlock," Clinton said. "So, it's not, primarily 'a racial problem' -- it's a problem of income, family structure, and educational level."

Not surprisingly, Clinton's message astonished many liberals. They were embarrassed that one of their own was lamenting "the breakdown of the family" rather than using proper liberal-speak -- i.e., "The family isn't declining; it's simply changing or evolving."

Nevertheless, Clinton's bold rhetoric certainly got the attention of many low-income Americans. They heard him say it was harmful for women to have babies out of wedlock, and that the government was going to stop sending checks to people who refused to work.

That's why many welfare recipients began to change their behavior even before welfare reform legislation was adopted. Indeed, the day the welfare caseloads started to decline was the day Bill Clinton went on national TV and said that if we stopped giving welfare checks to low-income women, they'd have fewer out-of-wedlock babies.

Now, of course, for Clinton tough rhetoric was always easier than tough action. It took a Republican Congress to translate Clinton's rhetoric into reality. But Clinton's values talk helped jump start a decline in welfare dependence, and the work requirements and time limits in the actual legislation pushed this change into overdrive, stimulating an unprecedented plummet in welfare caseloads and poverty among single mothers.

Critically, Clinton's rhetorical boldness helped create a climate where national leaders could finally acknowledge the obvious -- that unwed childbearing, not race, was at the heart of our nation's welfare problem.

And Clinton's rhetorical boldness helped create a climate where serious welfare reform could take place. "You have to get the values right," Clinton told his aide Bruce Reed during the early stages of the process. "If you get the policy right and the values wrong, the whole thing will fail; but if you get the values right, then this whole thing will work out."

To a large extent, Bill Clinton "got the values right" on welfare reform. And because he did, Clinton not only helped end welfare as we know it, but he helped end welfare as we know it before anyone even knew it.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 60yearoldadolescent; 60yearoldprostate; ahab; attentionwhore; formerfirstrapist; impeachedexpresident; juiceboxsqueezer; liar; slick; vetodementia
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To: presidio9

I think as time passes on, we will realize Clinton was a good president. Look at what party is parading in front of us now.


21 posted on 08/24/2006 7:02:33 AM PDT by usastandsunited
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To: presidio9

We all know the facts but apparently Robert Rector doesn't !!!


22 posted on 08/24/2006 7:02:42 AM PDT by Obie Wan
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To: Northern Yankee

Bill Clinton signed welfare reform because it was forced on him. He doesnt deserve credit in any way.

This should have a barf alert.


23 posted on 08/24/2006 7:03:05 AM PDT by sgtbono2002 (The fourth estate is a fifth column.)
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To: presidio9
Total bull sh*t. He had no choice because the bill was veto proof. He himself said he was signing it reluctantly.
Bill clinton was, is, and will always be wrong.
24 posted on 08/24/2006 7:04:23 AM PDT by gedeon3
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To: All

Note to Robert Rector, you can gold plate a turd, but there is nothing but $#** under the gold.

Robert Rector is just doing his best to create a legacy for X#42.


25 posted on 08/24/2006 7:13:28 AM PDT by Arrowhead1952 (The media and the democrats are the biggest supporters of the terrorists.)
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To: sgtbono2002; kstewskis; Victoria Delsoul
This should have a barf alert.

Absolutely... and American Heritage? Yee..Gods!

26 posted on 08/24/2006 7:24:34 AM PDT by Northern Yankee ( Stay The Course!)
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To: Northern Yankee

Whoops... Heritage Foundation...


27 posted on 08/24/2006 7:25:11 AM PDT by Northern Yankee ( Stay The Course!)
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To: presidio9

Is this a BARF ALERT?He vetoed the legislation when first presented!This sounds a little like "I Voted For It,Before I Voted Against It"(only in reverse)!!!!!!!!!!!


28 posted on 08/24/2006 7:27:38 AM PDT by bandleader
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To: ABG(anybody but Gore)

In other words,it was Dick Morris who passed the legislation!I'd give his major pollster(Stan Greenberg)some credit as well!!


29 posted on 08/24/2006 7:30:17 AM PDT by bandleader
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To: RexBeach

Parsing? The author argues that Clinton's ability to manipulate "words and symbols" deserves more credit than it gets. Hardly a revolutionary opinion.


30 posted on 08/24/2006 7:33:29 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: usastandsunited

Clinton did not bother me. I understood from the start what he was and embraced the electoral process thus making him my president too.
As for what the party is parading now. You are so right. The asylum is being run by the crazies. Now it seems never again will a DLC endorsed nominee (who can be "moderate") win.


31 posted on 08/24/2006 7:37:04 AM PDT by griswold3 (Ken Blackwell, Ohio Governor in 2006- No!! You cannot have my governor in 2008.)
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To: Always Right

He would not want to betray his RINO roots.

Why has he helped McCain so much? RINOs of a feather stick together.

And how does McCain say thanks? By acting like a Demon_rat about the war.


32 posted on 08/24/2006 7:37:07 AM PDT by sine_nomine (American is a great country: 20 million illegals can't be wrong. So build that wall, Mr. Bush.)
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To: bandleader

No, you can thank Newt and the GOP Congress for passing it. Morris was smart enough to read the tea leaves and knew that X42 was going to lose to Bob Dole if he kept stonewalling.


33 posted on 08/24/2006 7:37:53 AM PDT by ABG(anybody but Gore) ("By the time I'm finished with you, you're gonna wish you felt this good again" - Jack Bauer)
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Comment #34 Removed by Moderator

To: Always Right
You prefer lip service Clinton over Conservative judiciary (moving the entire country to the right), pro-life, pro-military Bush??

After five years on this forum, I'm still amazed by what some people will post just to get a dig in at this President.....

35 posted on 08/24/2006 7:40:14 AM PDT by ohioWfan (George W. Bush - "Take his character all together, and we shall not look upon his like again.")
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To: presidio9

Is Rector a liberal wolf in sheep's clothing, or just a fellow with a really bad memory??


36 posted on 08/24/2006 7:41:41 AM PDT by ohioWfan (George W. Bush - "Take his character all together, and we shall not look upon his like again.")
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To: ohioWfan
Is Rector a liberal wolf in sheep's clothing, or just a fellow with a really bad memory??

I knew Robert when I worked in DC. I did welfare policy for another organization for a while. This surprises me a little bit.

Then again, I haven't spoken with him in at least 13 years or more.

37 posted on 08/24/2006 7:43:47 AM PDT by Corin Stormhands (HHD: Join the Hobbit Hole Troop Support - http://freeper.the-hobbit-hole.net/)
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To: presidio9

Going back and reviewing some Rector's previous work all I can say is -- someone replaced him with a mind numbed Pod Person who wrote this nonsense.


38 posted on 08/24/2006 7:46:19 AM PDT by Condor51 (Better to fight for something than live for nothing - Gen. George S. Patton)
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To: reagan_fanatic
"Sometimes, you need a little reminder like that to fully appreciate Mr. Clinton's massive ego and understand what his Presidency was really all about - self-absorbtion."

I don't know that his ego is so massive. It just looks massive relative to the rest of him, which is stunted in so many ways.

39 posted on 08/24/2006 7:47:54 AM PDT by Sam Cree (Don't mix alcopops and ufo's)
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To: ABG(anybody but Gore); pipecorp; Northern Yankee

<< IIRC, this "reform" was shoved down his throat, he did not embrace it.

Correct. It wasn't until Dick Morris informed him he'd lose the '96 election if he continued blocking reform that he gave in. >>

Absolutely. Clinton was to "welfare reform" what the Spruce Goose was to modern air transport.


40 posted on 08/24/2006 8:01:26 AM PDT by Brian Allen ("Moral issues are always terribly complex, for someone without principles." - G K Chesterton)
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