In his 1980 campaign, Ronald Reagan successfully marshaled racialized and gendered tropes to recast hunger as a problem of personal responsibility. Presidents Reagan and Clinton’s efforts to “reform” America’s safety net increased the number of people struggling with hunger, fostering the misguided belief that charity and corporate donations could tackle hunger better than a broad-based government response.
Anti-taxation activists and self-described “neo-liberal” economists joined with segregationists, anti-communist crusaders, and the so-called “Moral Majority” of evangelical Christians to restrain the growing power of the federal government and promote an alternative vision of the nation based on free enterprise and individualism.
Echoing arguments from the late nineteenth century, this conservative coalition insisted that hunger was a problem of individuals, not of society, reframing calls for equal access to food as reflective of the failures of the poor to accept their personal responsibility. As President, Reagan imposed massive budget cuts, divesting from food assistance and forcing the growing charitable network to shoulder a greater share of the responsibility of feeding hungry Americans.
The “Reagan Revolution” shifted the frames through which many Americans understood the causes and consequences of hunger. Democrats and Republicans alike embraced the rhetoric of personal responsibility, advancing new “reforms” to the social safety net. By the 1990s, a new bipartisan consensus focused on enacting “market-oriented reforms” in American domestic policy, ushering in a series of legislative compromises that fundamentally reshaped the food safety net.
Text Citation: Michael Katz, The Undeserving Poor: America’s Enduring Confrontation with Poverty, 2nd Edition1 1 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013).
this gallery
Museum Map
WISHING
TREE
The Proof is in Our History
- 1.Welcome
- 2.Museum Lobby
- 3.Jewish Immigration from Eastern Europe
- 4.Immigration from Europe – for tours
- 5.Immigration from Europe
- 6.Jane Addams and Hull House
- 7.The Dark Side of Nutrition Science
- 8.On the Breadline
- 9.Beginnings
- 10.How did the Food Stamp Program work?
- 11.Farm Family Portraits Pic 2 for Tours
- 12.An Unequal Recovery
- 13.1945-1965: WWII and the Paradoxes of the Postwar Era
- 14.Norman Rockwell, “Freedom From Want”
- 15.How did the National School Lunch Program work?
- 16.What were the structural limitations of the National School Lunch Program’s reach?
- 17.What were the structural limitations of the National School Lunch Program’s reach? Pic 2 for tours
- 18.“New Frigidaire Refrigerators!” by General Motors
- 19.Hunger, Justice, and Civil Rights - Landing
- 20.Hunger, Justice, and Civil Rights - Main
- 21.Lunch Counter Student Sit-Ins (Greensboro, NC)
- 22.Fannie Lou Hamer and Freedom Farmers (Sunflower County, MS)
- 23.The Fish Wars (Nisqually, WA)
- 24.Cesar Chavez’s Fast for Nonviolence (Delano, CA)
- 25.Fannie Lou Hamer on CBS News Series “Of Black America”
- 26.President Lyndon B. Johnson
- 27.Senator George McGovern and Senator Robert Dole
- 28.Lyndon B. Johnson
- 29.Dr. Jean Mayer and the White House Conference
- 30.1975-1996: The Unmaking of the Great Society
- 31.Government Cheese
- 32.The Welfare Queen
- 33.Welfare Reform
- 34.COVID-19 – 2nd photo for tours
- 35.Wishing Tree
- 36.End tour
MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger