On Monday, the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law released its 2007 Congressional Poverty Scorecard. The President of the Center, John Bouman, noted that in states with the highest poverty rates, their congressional delegations tended to score the worst.
"Poverty is everywhere in America, but it is interesting that in states with the highest concentrations of poverty, the Congressional delegations seem least interested in supporting initiatives that fight poverty," said John Bouman, president of the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, which released the study. "This appears deeper than simply opposing spending. A member could have opposed any of the measures we analyzed that called for new spending and still could have voted to support half of the poverty-fighting measures on our list."
Former presidential candidate John Edwards was also on the center's conference call with reporters.
"We can get the national leadership and we can get the congressional leadership we need," Edwards said. "But first voters need to be educated as to who is doing the work and who is not."
Southern and Western states are doing the worst on poverty issues, according to the scorecard.
States whose delegations had the worst voting records and highest poverty rates were South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, Kentucky and Arizona.
Most of the proposals that were considered for calculating the grade on the scorecard did not pass the House and Senate. The Senate in particular had trouble passing these bills due to filibusters or the threat of filibusters by Republican members. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who received a grade of A+, explained as follows:
"That's something I don't think the America people understand," said Sanders on Monday, adding Republicans are "obstructing" the work of the Senate. "A lot of these votes were not yes or no on the specific bill. They were yes or no to end a filibuster."
Edwards said that progress on poverty will only come with leadership, but added that both Senator Clinton and Senator Obama have promised him that they will make poverty an issue in their campaigns and focus on it in the White House, if elected.
The report considered bills on a variety of issues affecting poverty.
The votes we selected cover a wide range of subject areas, including affordable housing, budget and tax, civil rights, early and higher education, health care, immigrants, labor, legal services, prisoner reentry, and rural poverty. In some important subject areas such as assets policy, we did not include any votes because we determined that no votes important to fighting poverty occurred in that subject area in 2007.
The report considered fourteen votes in the Senate and fifteen votes in the House. Members were scored on "yes" or "no" votes and absent votes were eliminated.
The center was able to provide a score for 92 out of 100 Senators. Eight Senators received no score because they had not participated in enough of the votes. In many cases this was because they were running for President, though one was ill and one had arrived in the Senate partway through the year. They were also able to rank 424 out of 435 House members, with the few who were not scored also not voting enough times for similar reasons.
Click here to see which bills were considered and how your own Congressional representatives did.
Crossposted from EENR Blog


Comments: 9
What I do find shocking is that in general poverty is not getting much more attention in one of the wealthiest nations in the world. The gap between rich and poor is what shocks me, and the fact that so many seem to be OK with this.
For the most part, state reps in the ones mentioned are incredibly well-off..........both Democratic and Republican. Most of the poorest states have a lot of problems, in addition to the endemic problem of poverty.
There was one subsidy bill which I would have liked to see passed but which failed. Or should I say a change in subsidies.
60% of farm subsidies go to 10% of huge corporate farms. And people say the Left is no friend of business.
Can't debate , berate .
The way of the traitorous neocon war mongers.
"I believe shocking was your word, not mine."
Hey, like Obama likes to say "its just words"....lol.
"What I do find shocking is that in general poverty is not getting much more attention in one of the wealthiest nations in the world."
You may be too young to remember this, AstroGirl, but Lyndon Johnson waged "The War on Poverty" from the White House, from 1964-68, and we lost. Poverty won. It won because it's one of those never-ending maladies of man.............like aging, or war. It can't be defeated, it can only be treated.
In fact, Poverty won by a landslide, even though President Johnson pushed billions of dollars at it. I think most of our leaders learned a valuable lesson during the LBJ years...............one they don't want to be spanked with again. Can you really blame them?
Don : "I see you said something the berts of gather don't agree with and got db 1'd. Can't debate , berate . The way of the traitorous neocon war mongers."
I have never rated anyone at any time, ever, on Gather.......even if I liked their article. I don't view this as a popularity contest the way you do, Don. This is a place for the exchange of ideas...........but you wouldn't know that because you don't have any original ones.
"Just more proof that Republicans hate the poor. Didn't Devon have a column about that a while back?"
I think your article spelled it out very clearly that both Democrat and Republican representatives in the states you mentioned, all have the worst records on fighting poverty. This isn't a topic of just one party or the other..............at least not the way the Sargent Shriver National Poverty Law Center laid it out in their rating system, above.
Are we talking about Devin Barber? If so, I'm absolutely sure that a class warrior like Devin Barber would write something about the rich hating the poor. He loves shoveling that kind of tripe on the masses.