The selective socialism of Donald Trump: Farmers, yes. Poor families, no.

Washington Post logoThe popular understanding of what “socialism” entails isn’t quite right. We tend to use the expression interchangeably with “social programs,” government investments in aid to the American public. In other contexts, it’s used as a blanket pejorative. The Democrats want socialism, President Trump will say, part of his effort to tap into his base’s latent Cold War worries.

Trump’s party has consistently framed itself in opposition to big government spending, an idea that bleeds over into this nebulous socialismness, particularly as elections near. Democrats want to tax and spend; Republicans believe in the free market. That sort of thing. Cut spending, cut taxes, everyone wins.

While Trump doesn’t always hew to this line of rhetoric from his party, he does at times. As with his administration’s plan to change eligibility requirements for food stamps, reported on Tuesday.

View the complete July 23 article byPhilip Bump on The Washington Post website here.

Trump Federal Tax Dollars to Farmers for Tariff Relief

From the July 31 Star Tribune News Briefs:

More than half of the Trump administration’s trade-war aid for farmers went to just one-tenth of the recipients in the program, an analysis found.  Eighty-two farming operations received more than $500,000 each in payments through April under the Department of Agriculture’s Market Facilitation Program, according to the Environmental Working Group, which analyzed records covering $8.4 billion in payments. One farm, DeLine Farm Partnership of Charleston, MO, has so far received $2.8 million in trade aid payments.