Just weeks after taking office, President Lyndon Johnson declared war on poverty – a war that still rages fifty years later. And while Johnson himself helped the situation by creating Medicare and Medicaid as well as dozens of jobs programs, millions of Americans still struggle to get by.
The rate of Americans below the poverty line has fallen since 1964, from 19% to 15%, but the ranks of the poor in raw numbers has actually grown. In 2012, census numbers showed more than 46 million people in poverty, including 1 out of every 5 children, 1 in 4 African-Americans and Hispanics and nearly 1 in 3 single mothers.
President Obama has pledged to make closing the gap between the rich and poor a key part of his 2014 agenda, but Demos distinguished senior fellow Bob Herbert told Chuck Todd he’s not optimistic anything will get done in this political climate. “No one is willing to talk about redistribution of wealth and income and you cannot make a serious dent in poverty without distribution, without taking something from the haves and moving it toward the have-nots.”









