Posted on 06/25/2016 4:39:14 AM PDT by Kaslin
Maine Gov. Paul LePage is challenging the federal government over how to administer the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly known as food stamps. Under the guise of reforming SNAP, Maines Republican governor wants to monitor what poor people eat and drink. The governor wants to create a state-based food-police to control what Maines poorest citizens put in their grocery bags.
In pushing for the food ban, the governor is picking a page right out of the Democratic playbook. LePage impugns the motives of the opposition by invoking the Lefts favorite bogeyman American businesses. The governor said that he could think of only one reason why the federal government would refuse his demand to ban certain foods: the feds are kowtowing to grocery store owners and food manufacturers. LePage accuses special intereststhose pesky job creatorsfor standing in his way.
Emboldened by his political power, LePage has decided to push his idea of healthy-living by government fiat. A can of soda or sweet tea with lunch or a cupcake for dessert, if LePage thinks it is bad for you, it simply has to go. It is the latest example of a politician attempting to expand the nanny-statea social engineering effort where the governor knows what is best for the low-income families of Maine.
Some public health advocates support food bans because they say a significant portion of low-income Americans struggle with obesity, diabetes, tooth decay, and other health issues that result from an unhealthy diet. However, low-income people are not the only ones suffering from diet-related ailments. Like all Americans, SNAP recipients drink soda, enjoy candy bars, and have chips with their sandwiches. If the precedent is set that the government, on the basis of public health, has the authority to dictate the food choices of the poor, what is to stop other states or the feds from regulating the dietary choices of all Americans? If your bad food choice leads to an increase in my health insurance premium, one could argue that we need the government food-police.
The governors proposal raises a whole set of red flags: How will a food ban be enforced? How much will the food-police cost the taxpayer for Maine to codify and enforce its food standards? What foods will be put on the government's "naughty list" and how will such a "naughty list" impact the free market? Will a preferred food list create a new lobbying class to keep certain foods on the governments list and keep other foods off? The governors proposed food ban will not save taxpayer resources or shrink government. To the contrary, LePage will be creating a food bureaucracy that will result in a bigger, more intrusive government run amok.
States cant regulate purchases under the federal and state Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, so Maine had to ask the Obama administration for a waiver that no other state has received. In a letter sent to the Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Tom Vilsack, the governor warned that if the USDA did not allow Maine to ban the purchase of certain foods deemed by the governor to be unhealthy he will scrap the entire program.
LePage wrote that he does not want his name attached to the SNAP program and will act unilaterally, or cease Maines administration of the food stamp program altogether. The Maine legislature rejected bills from the LePage administration that would have directed the governor to pursue waivers allowing the state to ban certain food purchases with food stamps in 2013 and 2015. Yet, the governor ignored the legislature and sought the waiver alone.
SNAP is funded at the federal level, but states manage the monthly benefits to individuals and assume some of those administrative costs. The USDA allows states flexibility over how the program is run, but LePages threat to unilaterally act or end the program is unprecedented. Its his "I've got a pen, and I've got a phone moment of threatening to ignore the Rule of Law. Its another page out of the liberal playbook. If he doesnt like the law, the governor will ignore the law.
If the governor suspends SNAP orwithout legal authorityamends the program, LePage will be inviting the federal government to interfere in ways that will threaten the Constitution's federalist structure. Like the governor, President Obama, himself, has a record of acting outside the law when it has suited his political aims. LePage might force President Obamas hand to intervene in an extra-Constitutional manner.
The trouble with the governors proposal is that it undermines conservative principles; ignores the Rule of law, and, damages our federalist system. Conservatives value the individual. We believe that any individual rich or poor has the capacity to thrive and make life better. The heart of conservatism is a profound respect for the dignity of every man and woman. Sadly, the governors food ban belies common-sense principles, and it creates a gateway for government intrusion onto our kitchen tables.
Whether its under the guise of entitlement reform or public health, some politicians may favor food monitoring and restrictions because its an easy way to mislead voters to think theyre being good stewards of taxpayer money. But, food restrictions in SNAP will create a food bureaucracy mimicking the complexity of other regulatory boondoggles. Bureaucrats will have to analyze and categorize the 300,000 food and beverage products on the market now and the additional 15,000 food items introduced every year. If the precedent is set that the government on the basis of public health has the authority to monitor the food choices of the poor, Governor LePage will set us down a slippery slope toward the food-police regulating and keeping watch over the diets of all Americans.
When you see an EBT card used to purchase lobster tails, Chesapeake Bay Blue Shell crabs by the bushel something smells
I’ve seen EBT people buying upscale foods while the people paying for this are buying Hamburger Helper. There should be a strict list of food types that can be purchased.
Idiotic article. Le Page is 100% right to restrict these (and other) items from SNAP leeches.
I’m opposed to a food ban just like I’m opposed to a big soda ban.
Politicians have no business micromanaging people’s eating and drinking habits.
We’ve already given up a great deal of our freedom. Let lePage mind his own business and we’ll mind ours.
One might want an investigation in cases where this happens egregiously. Are the persons putting the state on about their degree of poverty? This would be more of a watch list than a banned list.
Not that the state is the best vehicle of what ought to be religious charity, but if it is to be one at all, then it should have some ability to check into the integrity of the claims it gets.
As long as addicts can trade their gummint benies for crack how are they gonna do food police. Laughable.
Let your politician tell you you can’t buy beer, can’t drink big soda and you can’t salt your food.
I bet you wouldn’t like it. A politician is not my doctor and should stay the f*ck out of my life.
LePage is right.
The morality is complicated by the fact that this is a kind of de facto insurance. “I paid for this for years in my paycheck; now that I am down and out, I simply ought to get it as a matter of fairness.”
Right according to some abstract morality or by law applying to the system?
If the poor want to buy booze or junk food with their OWN hard-earned money, that’s their business. When the taxpayers are buying THEIR booze and junk food (or gourmet food), that’s the taxpayers business.
Some of these people are buying potato chips.
I think there might be a subtler plan afoot. If governor LePage continues to tick off the federal nannies, they could end up taking over the food stamp program, or ending it in Maine altogether. Either way, the state of Maine no longer has to deal with it.
SNAP never, ever covered alcohol. Anywhere.
Adults are not children.
With freedom, comes the ability to live our lives irrespective of whether other people approve of it or not.
I wouldn’t want the government to decide what kind of lifestyle is appropriate for me. That’s my business.
LePage is anti-American.
Who are you to decide what people drink and eat?
I’m all for guarding against fraud, waste and abuse but we don’t need or want a food police.
Ive seen EBT people buying upscale foods while the people paying for this are buying Hamburger Helper. There should be a strict list of food types that can be purchased.
LePage isn;t banning food. He’s just setting parameters for the menu of the government-operated soup kitchen.
Of course. This is typical lefty BS. The libtards always seek perceived injustice and then “virtue signal” the herd for their “moral superiority”. More lemming libtards clamber on and insist gummint DO SOMETHING. Never mind the proposed program is stupid, or unConstitutional or both, and worse. The elected corrupt betray their oath and pass legislation that is not helpful or worse. Rinse, repeat. Oh, and each cycle breeds a new round of cronies that leech off the taxpayers and launders funds back to the DNC.
The Rats have been doing this for decades with great success.
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