Paul Krugman, the economist who writes a regular column for the New York Times, recently explored why Republicans oppose free lunch for students. The simple answer is that it’s just plain weird. The more complex answer is that they don’t want to create an “entitlement” for children. The irony that he does not explore is why Republicans are unwilling to pay for free lunches, yet eager to pay the tuition of students who attend religious or other private schools, regardless of their family’s income.
He writes:
You could say that Tim Walz became the Democratic vice-presidential nominee with one weird trick — that is, by using that word to describe Donald Trump and JD Vance, a categorization that went viral. In his maiden campaign speech he upgraded it a bit further to “creepy and weird as hell.” (If you think that’s over the top, have you seen Trump’s bizarre rant speculating about whether Joe Biden is going to seize back his party’s presidential nomination?)
But Walz is more than a meme-maker. He has also been an activist governor of Minnesota with a strong progressive agenda. And I’d like to focus on one key element of that agenda: requiring that public and charter schools provide free breakfasts and lunches to all students.
Perhaps not incidentally, child care has long been a signature issue for Kamala Harris, and Walz’s policies may have played a role in his selection as her running mate.
In any case, free school meals are a big deal in pure policy terms. They have also met fierce Republican opposition. And the partisan divide over feeding students tells you a lot about the difference between the parties, and why you really, really shouldn’t describe the MAGA movement as “populist.”
Now, even many conservatives generally support, or at least claim to support, the idea of cheap or free lunches for poor schoolchildren. The National School Lunch Program goes all the way back to 1946, when it passed with bipartisan support and President Harry Truman signed it into law.
Why should the government help feed kids? Part of the answer is social justice: Children don’t choose to be born into families that can’t or won’t feed them adequately, and it seems unfair that they should suffer. Part of the answer is pragmatic: Children who don’t receive adequate nutrition will grow up to be less healthy and less productive adults than those who do, hurting society as a whole. So spending on child nutrition is arguably as much an investment in the future as building roads and bridges.
There’s a strong case that in general child nutrition programs more than pay for themselves by creating a healthier, higher-earning future work force. In other words, this is one area where there really is a free lunch.
Schools, then, should feed students who might otherwise not get enough to eat. But why make free meals available to all children, rather than only to children from low-income households? There are multiple reasons, all familiar to anyone who has looked into the problems of antipoverty policy in general.
First, trying to save money by limiting which children you feed turns out to be expensive and cumbersome; it requires that school districts deal with reams of paperwork as they try to determine which children are eligible. It also imposes a burden on parents, requiring that they demonstrate their neediness.
Additionally, restricting free meals to children whose parents can prove their poverty creates a stigma that can deter students from getting aid even when they’re entitled to receive it. I know about this effect from family history: My mother, who grew up in the Depression, used to talk about her shame at not being able to afford new shoes because her parents, although just as poor as her classmates’ parents, couldn’t bring themselves to apply for government assistance.
And it’s not as if feeding children is prohibitively expensive. So if you want to make sure that children get enough to eat, having schools offer free meals to all their students, without an income test, would seem to be simple common sense.
But Republicans in general aren’t on board. The Minnesota law that Walz signed passed essentially along party lines. The people behind Project 2025, in particular, don’t approve. (Yes, despite denials, Project 2025 is a very good guide to what a second Trump administration might do.) The project’s magnum opus, “Mandate for Leadership,” whose 900 pages lays out a detailed policy agenda, singles out feeding students as something that should be reined in. “Federal school meals increasingly resemble entitlement programs,” it warns, as if this is self-evidently a bad thing. A bit farther down, it reads, “The U.S.D.A. should not provide meals to students during the summer unless students are taking summer-school classes.” I guess being hungry isn’t a problem when school is out.
Stories like this are why my hackles rise whenever people call MAGA a populist movement. The people who will almost certainly make policy if Trump wins are as committed as ever to a right-wing economic agenda of cutting taxes on the wealthy while slashing programs that help Americans in need — including programs that help children.
In addition to being cruel, this agenda tends to be unpopular. Most Americans support providing all students with meals, regardless of their income, just as most Americans now support the Affordable Care Act, which Trump will very likely again try to destroy if returned to office.
But the American right lives in an echo chamber that normalizes views on both economic and social policy that are very much at odds with what a majority of voters want. Those extreme views often fly under the radar. But sometimes they do attract attention. And when they do, many people find them … weird.

If we feed all kids at schools, we will have become a radical Marxist socialist communist nation.
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Yes, feeding kids on the government’s dime is Communist Marxist.
But giving vouchers to rich people for their kid’s private school tuition is just swell.
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Gah! I left out godless.
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Of course! Radical Communist Socialist Marxist Fascist Godless…
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Yes, because Jesus told us not to feed the poor because that’s communism. Right?
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And don’t forget the superb advice Jesus gave about how to keep your Tesla Cybertruck from rusting.
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“Radical Marxist socialist communist” nation! I don’t know what’s worse: the tightened tinfoil you’re using or the over-redundancy of stringing those words together! Next time you buy tinfoil, please leave the free glue samples behind. And didn’t Jesus leave behind instructions? Comfort the afflicted, afflict the comfortable?
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Which Jesús?
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At the beginning of one school year, a friend dropped by my middle school classroom to say hi to my students. In the front row there was a squirmy little Latino sixth grader who caught the visitor’s attention.
“What’s your name?”
“I’m Jesus, who are you?”
Still makes me laugh more than 40 years later.
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Efff. . . . wordpress!
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Guess I needed to add a snark tag!
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Christine was joking.
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Oh, sorry!!!!
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Ms. Langhoff,
I’m so sorry for my completely uninformed and shoot-from-the hip reply, indeed my snark detector malfunctioned and took your message at completely face value. My most sincere and humblest apologies.
Yossarian
PS: sorry to take so long to apologize, I’ve been prepping for school.
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On, no worries at all! Satire is hard online and way too many folks wear tin hats.
I hope you have a good school year!
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The GOP has morphed into “The Party of Cruelty and Hate.”
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Another reason GOP opposes free lunch is that it is another reason that parents might choose public schools over private schools.
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I realize not everything is about race. But in California, where 62% of kids are eligible for free lunch (proxy for poverty), and coincidentally (?), 60% of those kids are Hispanic/Latino, the optics are terrible. The Republicans do not want to support any kind of program that would lift up black/brown children, for the usual reasons.
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Same for Texas, where a majority of the state’s 5 million public school students are Black or Brown.
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We should also remember that supporting vouchers for the affluent is wildly popular among extremists because it legitimizes the theft of funds from union supporting public schools. It also reduces the funds and educational options for these vulnerable students that attend under resourced public schools. MAGA extremists do not care about disadvantaged students, and they do not want spend money on resources for them. In Florida DeSantis rejected a summer nutrition program for poor students because it was sponsored by the federal government. He also cut Medicaid for the neediest children in the state because in his warped mind needy children are better off hungry and sick than developing “a welfare mentality.”
I worked with poor immigrants for most of my career as a teacher. Free breakfast and lunch helped these children pay attention in class. When health care became available to these vulnerable children in New York, it was a blessing. Teachers cannot effectively teacher sick children with toothaches and fevers. In the early days of my career before my district hired a Haitian liaison, I sometimes received calls on wall phone in my classroom from dentists and emergency room doctors asking me to translate for parents desperate to help their ailing child. We must not go back to the mistreatment of the least among us.
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cx: Teachers cannot effectively teach….
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And then there are the kids who took advantage of some of the government benefits like free eye exams and glasses but whose parents couldn’t take off work ( and lose a day’s pay) to take them to eye appointments when their glasses were lost or broken, especially when getting to the appointment entailed erratic and complicated public transportation.
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If only free lunch weren’t the cliche example in “there’s no such thing as free lunch”
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Krugman is correct. The populist appeal of MAGA is like the populist appeal of southern political leadership. Appeals to common distrust of people or institutions leads folks without much hope in life to support people in power whose interests actually run counter to their own. If this is populism, count me out.
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Well if it’s common sense to do something you can be assured the Republicans will oppose it on “principle”.🤦🏻♂️
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Taking food from babies. It’s a freaking cliche of horrific behavior AND descriptive of the party that the Republicans have become.
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‘MAGA movement’ widely unpopular, new poll finds
Just 24% of Americans surveyed have positive views of the Make America Great Again movement in a new national NBC News poll.
Trump’s ‘MAGA movement’ widely unpopular, new poll finds (nbcnews.com)
That 24% rating does not lie. Only a fraction of voters turn out for the primaries and Traitor Trump’s MAGA cult are fascist fanatics. Those fanatics turn out in mass for the republican primaries, but the candidates they vote for, lose in the midterm and general elections.
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That poll is from Apr ’23.
Hopefully that rating is even less by now.
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I think FDR saw the war coming during the Depression and understood that a strong country with a strong military needs strong, healthy young people. I think Republicans today do not care about their country. They’re stupid as can be. So, how many Republicans does it take to screw in a lightbulb? None. Republicans do not replace lightbulbs. They prefer to live in the dark.
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FDR was also up against very wealthy industrialist fascists that sympathized with Hitler. Thank goodness democracy prevailed, and we must ensure that it does once again.
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Well said
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Because the Rethugs couldn’t care less about a hungry child.
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”Should I get personal?…”
Cruelty is the point indeed.
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“Populist”/ “populism”: the term is used in too many different ways to make sense. Krugman adds to the confusion IMHO.
MAGA absolutely IS a populist movement, if we are going to use the #1 (most common) Oxford definition: “a political approach that strives to appeal to ordinary people who feel that their concerns are disregarded by established elite groups.” Wikipedia definition starts similarly, expanding: “It is frequently associated with anti-establishment and anti-political sentiment… the ‘ideational’ approach… presents “the people” as a morally good force and contrasts them against “the elite,” who are portrayed as corrupt and self-serving.” In other words, it’s always “us” vs “them,” using division and demonization of the other as its driving force. [An integral chapter in the how to be an autocrat playbook.]
But a little research has shown me that there are multiple definitions within various fields of study, many of which are only tangentially related. Paul Krugman’s use of the word… sounds kind of like “popular” 😀
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In the middle school where I taught, most of the kids qualified for free or reduced-price lunch. Even before California changed to breakfast and lunch for all, our school was excused from completing application forms. It was not cost effective to collect forms for 2,500 kids to eliminate a few families. When we were still collecting applications, one boy in my homeroom asked me not to ask where his application was. He told me where his parents worked. The family would not qualify, but he didn’t want the rest of the class to know his family was better off.
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