As the 50th anniversary of President Lyndon Johnson’s declaration of a “war on poverty” nears, Sen. Marco Rubio has declared his own war on what he calls the “big government” approach to dealing with poverty.
“After 50 years isn’t it time to declare big government’s war on poverty a failure?” Rubio asked in a web video released this weekend. “Instead of continuing to borrow and spend trillions of dollars on government programs that don’t work, what our country needs is a real agenda that helps people acquire the skills they need to lift themselves out of poverty and to pursue the American dream.”
Rubio’s far from the first to declare the war a failure. President Ronald Reagan who declared during his presidency that “poverty won the war.”
As he and his Republicans colleagues prepare for the 2014 election, Rubio’s Reaganesque rhetoric still lacks specificity. The details of his conservative solution to the poverty problem only specifically mention repealing the Affordable Care Act and helping people “acquire the skills they need to lift themselves out of poverty,” but Rubio said he’ll explain more about that “in the coming months.”
Rubio’s Senate colleague Rand Paul revealed some of his own ideas in Detroit last month, proposing policies to create “economic freedom zones” to help address poverty in communities struggling like Detroit. His proposal includes offering relief on income, payroll, and capital gains taxes, to help spur business investment.









