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05.14.2008 7:20 pm

Akin votes against Farm Bill; opposes food-stamp spending

Special to the Post-Dispatch
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U.S. Rep. Todd Akin , R-Mo., announced today that he voted “against a 44 percent increase in government spending in the $307 billion farm bill.”

Otherwise known as the ”Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008,” the bill is estimated to cost the government $658 billion over the next ten years.

Akin complained that it offered “few market reforms.”

Here’s his statement:

“I support the 13% of the bill designated for our farmers and agriculture. However 73% provides for an increase in food stamp entitlements, which is an increase that places too high a burden on taxpayers and the overall economy.

“It is inappropriate to ask the average American family, already burdened by increased grocery costs, to foot the bill for this $300 billion piece of legislation.”

14 comments

Comments are closed.

Congressman Akin got it half right. The “13% of the bill designated for our farmers” is even worse than the food stamp increase. I’m not excited about either one of those increases - but if I have to choose between giving away more food stamps, or writing bigger checks to ADM and other politically connected agribusinesses, I’ll choose the food stamps every time.

— Nick Kasoff
7:59 pm May 14th, 2008

Regarding the 13 - 73 % difference. What is the percentage of hungry people vs farmers in the second cong. district? Can he really talk about increased grocery costs and not realize the mere pittance most get on food stamps would feed anyone very nutritiously?

In addition, some of that food stamp/EBT can be used at Farmers Markets. Won’t that benefit the farmer as much as the 13% of the bill that was subsidies?

— suzyjax
8:44 pm May 14th, 2008

That’s deplorable!!

— Billybob
8:46 pm May 14th, 2008

Suzyjax,
I’m not going to sugar coat it…I think that most of the subsidies that farmers get are against conservative values and the free market. However, your assertion that the EBT/Food Stamp program is “a mere pittance” is way off. I used to be a cashier at a grocery store, and it used to tick me off like no other twice a month when people would come through with two cart loads of groceries (NAME BRAND AT THAT) and use an EBT card. When they went over, they put the vegetables and other healthy items to the side while keeping the Oreos and bottles of Coke. I’m all for helping individuals down on their luck (and think the WIC program is outstanding), but Speaker Jetton wasn’t all that far off when he said the best he’s ever eaten was when he was on food stamps. The program needs a huge overhaul.

— missouriright
9:42 pm May 14th, 2008

Although I may be objective, it’s the blind squirrel theory: even a nut fins a blind squirrel every so often. Right vote, perhaps, tho that can be argued either way, not sure what I would do (hope to find a better bill, would be my answer), the totally wrong reason.

— Bill Haas
9:42 pm May 14th, 2008

“finds”, of course.

— Bill Haas
9:43 pm May 14th, 2008

Bill:

You’ll always be my blind squirrel expert.

Or are you the expert nut?

I forget which sometimes.

— tsquare
11:13 pm May 14th, 2008

MissouriRight,
There will always be people who do the wrong thing. We cannot judge the system based on your anectdotal evidence from a long ago cashier’s job. For example, the Farmer’s Market EBT use could hardly be used for twinkies and prime rib. It definitely is a move in the direction of making sure healthy choices are made.
Cape Girardeau Congresswoman Joann Emerson tried the “food stamp diet”. With that she took the typical $21 a week alloted to single food recipients. Yes, I consider $21 a week a mere pittance.

— suzyjax
7:24 am May 15th, 2008

Here we go again with the “food stamps don’t provide enough” discussion. So for those of you who missed it last time, here’s a link to the program description, along with benefit amounts:

http://www.fns.usda.gov/fsp/applicant_recipients/fs_Res_Ben_Elig.htm

As I have pointed out every time this issue comes up, a family of 4 can receive up to $542 a month in food stamps. That is more than this Aldi shopper ever spends on food for our family. We don’t buy soda, we buy very little junk food, and we almost never buy name brand products. But we always eat well - tonight, for example, we’re having homemade beef stew. Tomorrow, steak. All the meat was “almost expired” clearance at Aldi.

If you aren’t satisfied with the amount you get in food stamps … get a job!

— Nick Kasoff
8:19 am May 15th, 2008

Akin did the Christian thing here. Those who God has blessed with wealth and abundant food should not have to provide any concern or care for the least among us. The weak, poor and sick are that way for a reason and the fewer there are of them, the better the rest of us Christians are.

Contrary to common knowledge we are no longer “all in this together” as evidenced by the Christian concern shown by Rep Akin.

As Akin complains, maybe we are taxing the wrong folks, if any increase is a huge burden to the average American Family then maybe the 200K a year or more crowd would not feel so put upon?

— Thomas
11:36 am May 15th, 2008

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