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President Trump Plans to End Welfare Abuse, Shut Down Clinton Programs!


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It’s about time!

One of the things Donald Trump knows about as a world-class businessman is how to run an efficient and profitable business. 

And you can’t do that when you’re bleeding at the seams!  

That’s welfare.  Absolute bleeding money with no hope in sight.  

In particular, Bill Clinton’s vast welfare expanses.  Where you barely have to do anything to qualify, and abuse runs amok.  In fact, in many cases the Clinton/Bush/Obama welfare programs make it LESS profitable to actually get a job compared to just signing up for your government welfare checks.  So sad.

Not anymore.

Not under a real President.  President Donald J. Trump.  

President Trump is now setting his sights on closing these abuses and vastly eliminating the Clinton wellfare apparatus.  

Source:

Here are more details on the new story, from ABC News:

Overhauling welfare was one of the defining goals of Bill Clinton's presidency, starting with a campaign promise to "end welfare as we know it," continuing with a bitter policy fight and producing change that remains hotly debated 20 years later.

Now, President Donald Trump wants to put his stamp on the welfare system, apparently in favor of a more restrictive policy. He says "people are taking advantage of the system."

Trump, who has been signaling interest in the issue for some time, said this past week that he wants to tackle the issue after the tax overhaul he is seeking by the end of the year. He said changes were "desperately needed in our country" and that his administration would soon offer plans.

For now, the president has not offered details. Spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanderssaid more specifics were likely early next year. But the groundwork has already begun at the White House and Trump has made his interest known to Republican lawmakers.

Paul Winfree, director of budget policy and deputy director of Trump's Domestic Policy Council, told a recent gathering at the conservative Heritage Foundation that he and another staffer had been charged with "working on a major welfare reform proposal." He said they have drafted an executive order on the topic that would outline administration principles and direct agencies to come up with recommendations.

"The president really wants to lead on this," Winfree said. "He has delivered that message loud and clear to us. We've opened conversations with leadership in Congress to let them know that that is the direction we are heading."

Trump said in October that welfare was "becoming a very, very big subject, and people are taking advantage of the system."

Clinton ran in 1992 on a promise to change the system but struggled to get consensus on a bill, with Democrats divided and Republicans pushing aggressive changes. Four years later, he signed a law that replaced a federal entitlement with grants to the states, placed a time limit on how long families could get aid and required recipients to go to work eventually.

It has drawn criticism from some liberal quarters ever since. During her presidential campaign last year, Democrat Hillary Clinton faced activists who argued that the law fought for by her husband punished poor people.

Kathryn Edin, a professor at Johns Hopkins University who has been studying welfare since the 1990s, said the law's legacy has been to limit the cash assistance available to the very poor and has never become a "springboard to work." She questioned what kinds of changes could be made, arguing that welfare benefits are minimal in many states and there is little evidence of fraud in other anti-poverty programs.

Still, Edin said that welfare has "never been popular even from its inception. It doesn't sit well with Americans in general."



 

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