Biden, US officials warn of hunger for millions in a government shutdown
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[September 26, 2023]
By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden and one of his top aides
warned on Monday that a federal government shutdown could cause
widespread suffering, including a rapid loss of food benefits for nearly
7 million low-income women and children.
Biden told a meeting on Historically Black Colleges and Universities
that failure by Congress to fund the federal government would have dire
consequences for the Black community, including by reducing nutritional
benefits, inspections of hazardous waste sites and enforcement of fair
housing laws.
He said he and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy had agreed a few months ago
on spending levels for the government.
"We made a deal, we shook hands," he said. "Now a small group of extreme
House Republicans .. don't want to live up to that deal, and everyone in
America could be faced with paying the price for it."
Asked if he had spoken with McCarthy, Biden said, "I haven't." He shook
his head when asked when they would speak.
U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told reporters earlier that the
"vast majority" of the 7 million participants in the Special
Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC)
program would see an immediate reduction in benefits in the days and
weeks after a shutdown starts.
Nearly half of U.S. newborns rely on WIC, the USDA says.
A separate benefits program, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
(SNAP), will continue as normal for the month of October but could be
affected afterward, he said.
More than 40 million Americans relied on SNAP to make ends meet in 2022;
inflation has put new pressure on household budgets, with prices higher
since the COVID-19 pandemic for goods from bread to fresh vegetables and
baby formula.
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U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack speaks about a
possible government shutdown during a press briefing at the White
House in Washington, U.S., September 25, 2023. REUTERS/Leah Millis
During a shutdown, farm service agencies will also stop making loans
to farmers during harvest time, and new homebuyers will not be able
to get loans in rural areas, Vilsack said. More than 50,000
Department of Agriculture workers will be furloughed, meaning they
will not receive a paycheck.
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives may move to
advance steep spending cuts this week that would almost certainly be
rejected by the Democratic-controlled Senate. While the cuts would
not become law, a failure by both chambers to agree could force a
partial shutdown of the U.S. government by next Sunday.
House lawmakers on Tuesday were set to take up four spending bills
for the coming fiscal year that would also impose new restrictions
on abortion access, undo an $11 billion Biden administration climate
initiative, and resume construction of the Mexico-U.S. border wall,
a signature initiative of former President Donald Trump. Biden has
vowed to veto at least two of the bills.
Vilsack called Republican fiscal plans "punitive" and "petty."
(Reporting by Steve Holland; Writing by Andrea Shalal and Trevor
Hunnicutt; Editing by Mark Potter, Deepa Babington, Heather Timmons
and David Gregorio)
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