This website uses cookies to improve your experience.

Please enable cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website

Sign the petition

to call for a

Convention of States!

signatures
Columns Default Settings

Federal incompetence: "Marriage penalty" perpetuates poverty

Published in Blog on September 24, 2020 by Article V Patriot

The following was written by COS Action President Mark Meckler and originally published on SelfGovern.com.

As a proponent of self-governance, it’s frustrating to see the government causing damage as it tries to solve a problem.  The most recent example of this?  The “marriage penalty” in welfare.  

A recent study by the American Enterprise Institute shows the long broken welfare system dis-incentivises working class Americans from getting married. Without this government policy in place, couples would be more likely to provide the two parent households most healthy for children to grow up in. Instead, the socioeconomic divide only grows.

The Washington Free Beacon explains the “marriage penalty:”

“…a pregnant mother earning $21,000 a year, cohabiting with the father of her child, earning $29,000 a year, would be Medicaid-eligible. But if the two were to be married, their joint annual income would render her ineligible for Medicaid coverage for her birth—an average cost of $12,000. The result is that the structure of welfare discourages marriage, a.k.a. a marriage penalty.”

According to the Institute For Family Studies, 56% of upper class Americans aged between 18 and 55 are married. For lower class Americans, the percentage drops to 26%. 

Wait, I thought welfare was supposed to help working class citizens? Instead the single parent households brought about by the flawed system are perpetuating poverty. 

Explain to me again how Republicans don’t care about poor people?  Oh right.  Turns out, traditional values actually help insulate people from poverty… no matter how much Democrats have tried to stigmatize those beliefs.

Research in the AEI’s study showed a $1000 increase in the penalty resulted in a 1.7% decrease in marriage, and a 2.7% decrease in marriage with Americans without a college degree. 

If we take money from couples who would otherwise marry, fewer people get married.

The AEI’s study lists some of the benefits of the nuclear family.

Children in single-parent families are more than four times more likely to be poor than children raised by married parents. Socially and emotionally, girls are 2–5 times more likely to end up pregnant in adolescence and boys are 2–3 times more likely to end up incarcerated before they turn 30 if they grow up in a non-intact family. Children raised in cohabiting families are more than twice as likely to be suspended or expelled from high school compared to adolescents living with married parents.

Additionally, adding an unrelated adult to a single parent household can have disastrous consequences. One federal study found children living in a household with an unrelated adult were around 9 times more likely to be sexually, physically, or emotionally abused. 

Marriage is one of the key ways to lower the vast divide of income inequality in America. We need to stop making the poverty crisis in America a partisan issue, and resolve these long lasting programs destroying communities.

If the feds are so incompetent, why do we keep giving them power? The Convention of States Project aims to change that. Click here to learn more and read the petition below to see what we're all about.

Sign the petition to call for an Article V convention!

2,673,859 signatures

Petition your state legislator

Almost everyone knows that our federal government is on a dangerous course. The unsustainable debt combined with crushing regulations on states and businesses is a recipe for disaster.

What is less known is that the Founders gave state legislatures the power to act as a final check on abuses of power by Washington, DC. Article V of the U.S. Constitution authorizes the state legislatures to call a convention to proposing needed amendments to the Constitution. This process does not require the consent of the federal government in Washington DC.

I support Convention of States; a national movement to call a convention under Article V of the United States Constitution, restricted to proposing amendments that will impose fiscal restraints on the federal government, limit its power and jurisdiction, and impose term limits on its officials and members of Congress.

I want our state to be one of the necessary 34 states to pass a resolution calling for this kind of an Article V convention. You can find a copy of the model resolution and the Article V Pocket Guide (which explains the process and answers many questions) here: https://conventionofstates.com/handbook_pdf

I ask that you support Convention of States and consider becoming a co-sponsor. Please respond to my request by informing the national COS team of your position, or sending them any questions you may have:

info@conventionofstates.com or (540) 441-7227.

Thank you so much for your service to the people of our district.

Respectfully, [Your Name]

By checking this box, you agree to receive text messages sent via an “autodialer”. Our text messages are intended to inform you of events, calls to action, volunteering opportunities, and other matters pertaining to self-governance. Text STOP to stop receiving messages. Text HELP for more info. Message frequency varies. Message and data rates may apply. View Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Provide your full address and we will deliver your petition directly to your state legislators now and again during the legislative sessions, Free of Charge. We Protect your privacy.

We welcome all US citizens to support our movement by signing the petition. To deliver the petition to your state legislators, you must enter your full address, which must be within one of the 50 states. For military personnel serving overseas, or for expatriates, enter your Voting Residence Address .

Please be sure to check the "Send me email updates" box, and include your phone number above.

How did you hear about us:

 

Click here to get involved!
Convention of states action

Are you sure you don't want emailed updates on our progress and local events? We respect your privacy, but we don't want you to feel left out!

Processing...