President Obama on the 50th Anniversary of 'War on Poverty'
Statement by the President on the 50th Anniversary of the War on Poverty
The following is shared here from a release sent by the White House. It is unedited here:
The following is shared here from a release sent by the White House. It is unedited here:
"As
Americans, we believe that everyone who works hard deserves a chance at
opportunity, and that all our citizens deserve some basic measure of
security. And
so, 50 years ago, President Johnson declared a War on Poverty to help
each and every American fulfill his or her basic hopes. We created new
avenues of opportunity through jobs and education, expanded access to
health care for seniors, the poor, and Americans
with disabilities, and helped working families make ends meet. Without
Social Security, nearly half of seniors would be living in poverty.
Today, fewer than one in seven do. Before Medicare, only half of
seniors had some form of health insurance. Today,
virtually all do. And because we expanded pro-work and pro-family
programs like the Earned Income Tax Credit, a recent study found that
the poverty rate has fallen by nearly 40% since the 1960s, and kept
millions from falling into poverty during the Great
Recession.
These
endeavors didn’t just make us a better country. They reaffirmed that
we are a great country. They lived up to our best hopes as a people who
value the
dignity and potential of every human being. But as every American
knows, our work is far from over. In the richest nation on Earth, far
too many children are still born into poverty, far too few have a fair
shot to escape it, and Americans of all races and
backgrounds experience wages and incomes that aren’t rising, making it
harder to share in the opportunities a growing economy provides. That
does not mean, as some suggest, abandoning the War on Poverty. In fact,
if we hadn’t declared “unconditional war
on poverty in America,” millions more Americans would be living in
poverty today. Instead, it means we must redouble our efforts to make
sure our economy works for every working American. It means helping our
businesses create new jobs with stronger wages
and benefits, expanding access to education and health care, rebuilding
those communities on the outskirts of hope, and constructing new
ladders of opportunity for our people to climb.
We are a country that keeps the promises we’ve made. And in a 21st
century economy, we will make sure that as America grows stronger, this
recovery
leaves no one behind. Because for all that has changed in the 50 years
since President Johnson dedicated us to this economic and moral
mission, one constant of our character has not: we are one nation and
one people, and we rise or fall together."
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Labels: Obama, President Obama, War on Poverty. poverty
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