From the left, I don’t think the answer to those questions starts with taking more of it away. The great irony of the government employee DOGE email debacle is that I absolutely ****ing agree that there are too many government employees and in many departments the expectations and workloads are too low, and the services being provided to the American public as a result is subpar in many cases. I also don’t think the way we do food assistance in particular is generally effective and that a system where someone can buy hundreds of dollars in junk food each month is not hitting the mark.
But for me, the answer can’t start with feeding fewer hungry Americans. If it takes longer to lower the tax burden on the middle class or root out every last vestige of fraud and waste in the government, I’ll happily pay those same taxes if it means we address the problem without intentionally feeding fewer people that need it as a result of the cuts. That isn’t an unwillingness to accept them looking at and addressing wasteful contracts, processes and even employees, and certainly not to stop actual theft/fraud from those ineligible for benefits/payments. I just want the North Star of that mission to be reducing overhead and ineffective systems so they can try to feed as many Americans as possible and doing so in a way that doesn’t prioritize quickness over maintaining services while we figure it out.