Sen. Jon Husted (R-Ohio) faced backlash this week over comments he made about people living below the poverty line.
“People living in poverty are just not very, um, experienced at navigating the real world, right?” Husted told Nic Dunn, host of the conservative podcast “Defending Ideas,” while arguing that federal benefits can become a “trap” and a disincentive to work.
Husted claimed: “I remember talking to one young lady who said, ‘Well, I don’t really know how money works at a grocery store,’ because she grew up and has lived all of her adult life using SNAP cards to buy groceries. So, you literally have to teach people how to budget.”
Sen. Jon Husted: “People living in poverty are just not very, um, experienced at navigating the real world, right? I remember talking to one young lady who said, ‘Well, I don’t really know how money works at a grocery store,’ because she grew up and has lived all of her adult… pic.twitter.com/Ywm7QxOwA3
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) March 10, 2026
Husted’s proposed Upward Mobility Act purportedly seeks to address the so-called benefits cliff, he said, when small income increases can lead to people being stripped of their financial assistance.
Ohio Democrats quickly seized on the remarks from Husted, the former Ohio lieutenant governor who joined the Senate in 2025 to fill the seat previously held by Vice President JD Vance.
Democrat Sherrod Brown, who is running against Husted for the Senate seat, responded on X: “If anyone doesn’t know how the ‘real world’ works, it’s Jon Husted.”
Ohio Democratic Party communications adviser Tony Wen, in a statement, said Husted “couldn’t be more wrong and out of touch.”
“Ohioans are working harder than ever to make ends meet, but they’re being screwed by Husted and politicians in Washington voting to make everything more expensive. It’s clear that Jon Husted has no clue what people in Ohio are actually going through,” he added.
Critics on social media issued similar responses.
Yeahhhhh. Good luck with that messaging Republicans.
No wonder the Senate is in play.— Tara Setmayer 🌻 🇺🇸 (@TaraSetmayer) March 10, 2026
Does he believe that a snap card has unlimited money on it even if you’re getting food stamps you still have to budget.
— Stephanie Bjork (@stephbjork) March 10, 2026
Ohio Republican U.S. Sen. Jon Husted shares his thoughts about people living in poverty and how they “are just not very, um, experienced at navigating the real world.” https://t.co/g3IOkVZ4ND
— David DeWitt (@DC_DeWitt) March 10, 2026
Does he think people on SNAP get infinite amounts of money for food, so much that they don’t ever learn how to budget? What an insulting thing to say! Poor people have to add everything up as they go thru the store to know what to put back. I’ll bet he’s never done that.
— Amanda Berry (@amanda_booberry) March 10, 2026
Lol, that makes zero sense. You spend snap the same way you spend money. Money works at a grocery store the same way it works at every other store and usually there are things that aren’t covered.
— 忍者の神 Marxist-Yeagerist ⌬ (@delmoi) March 10, 2026
Poverty is the real world for some folks. Their survival skills are excellent.
— kentuckyliz (@kentuckyliz3) March 10, 2026
If we’re going to attack people for not managing their money, why does Trump still send out emails begging for donations? He can’t even run again.
— MakeTexasBlueAgain (@makeTXblueagain) March 10, 2026
These guys have the country at 38 trillion in debt and want to show people getting 400 on snap to budget.
— JCG_Truth (@JCGC2157) March 10, 2026
Gas went up 30 cents in 2 days.
How do people plan for “affordability” when gas prices are spiking due to Trump’s War?
— The Kid (@DisneyKid1955) March 11, 2026
Republicans are liars or completely out of touch with the general American public. Or both. Probably both.
— NW Pete (@ptv1024) March 10, 2026
Teach the pentagon how to budget. They’re the ones that keep failing audits.
— Appalachian Anomaly (@JonahBearsMom) March 10, 2026
Does he believe that SNAP cards are like limitless credit cards?
— Inselgoere ⚓ Good Trouble 🌊🌻🇺🇦 (@Inselgoere1) March 10, 2026