In His Own Words

Kansas Food stamp Application, page 1 of 15
Kansas Food stamp Application, page 1 of 15
Group in Office
Letter from Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz to Dole, 1974
Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz to Dole, 1974
Letter from U.S. Senate
Senators Dole and McGovern
Senators Dole and McGovern testifying for UN World Food Program

Food Stamps

The Food Stamp Program started in the late 1930s in response to an unprecedented situation where the U.S. had both farm surpluses and hundreds of thousands of hungry people. In the early version of the program, people purchased stamps on a $1 for $1 ratio, but also received additional stamps that entitled them to buy foods that were designated “surplus” at local stores for a reduced price.

The program lasted until 1943, when the escalation of World War II resulted in both decreased surpluses and reduced unemployment. In 1961, the Food Stamp Program was reestablished as a pilot program and incorporated as part of Lyndon Johnson’s War on Poverty to assist the thousands of Americans who were still under-nourished.

The Food Stamp Act of 1964 launched it as a permanent program, but it was not until 10 years later, in 1974 that the Food Stamp Program went nationwide and Congress required participation from all states. Bob Dole had been peripherally involved with the program throughout his House of Representatives and early Senate career, but in 1977 he led the charge to change the Food Stamp program significantly.

Along with George McGovern (D-SD), he worked to produce a bipartisan solution to two of the main problems associated with food stamps: cumbersome purchase requirements and lax eligibility standards. They succeeded in designing a program that eliminated the need for individuals to make a required minimum payment to obtain food stamp coupons – a minimum that many still could not afford. Click here for a 40 second video clip in Windows Media Format.

Additionally, their efforts added controls to the program, eliminating dependent college students whose families weren’t eligible and penalizing breadwinners who voluntarily quit their jobs and applied for food stamps; these moves protected taxpayers and the integrity of the program. Dole’s request to Congress to support this provision was characteristically frank:

“I am confident that this bill eliminates the greedy and feeds the needy.”

Dole’s involvement didn’t end there, though. In 1991, when a deadly tornado ripped through Southeast Kansas, he pushed for and got emergency food stamp assistance for residents in those counties in record time – just four days. Just two years later, when severe flooding occurred in the Midwest, he did the same for its residents. This only solidified Dole’s record as a strong yet pragmatic supporter of food stamps and the difference that they can make in the lives of Americans.