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"I think that there's some folks like Tom Vilsack and President Obama himself that imagine that if you just throw money at people, that somehow that will make the economy better," Romney said in August. "But we're out there borrowing money from the Chinese, to hand out money here, and that is not going to get America working again." Despite conservative sentiment to change the system -- and the Republican candidates who are willing to speak out against it
-- it is unclear whether Congress will ever take on the issue. Gingrich and other Republicans proposed food stamp overhaul as part of the welfare reform signed by President Bill Clinton in 1996, but more moderate Republicans helped block it. More than 15 years later, the issue has remained on the congressional back burner. Robert Rector, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, has been working on welfare issues since Ronald Reagan was president. He says he believes there is a public misperception of the issue. While he says the 1990s welfare reform package is generally popular among current voters, many don't want Congress to touch the issue of food stamps. But Rector believes many people think that recipients are required to look for work or enter job training in order to receive food stamps. When asked if able-bodied adults should be required to try and find work as a prerequisite for aid, many voters agree, he says. "In the long term what you have to do is transform this program from being a cash entitlement program into a program that promotes work and self-sufficiency," he says. Vicki Escarra, president of the anti-hunger group Feeding America, says the idea of fixing the deficit by cutting food assistance "lacks both compassion and reason." "Food stamps and other anti-hunger programs give hope to struggling Americans and protect them from deeper crisis as they work to get back on their feet," she says.
[Associated
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