No.

While, according to one source, Maine spends $40,000 on welfare per person in poverty, welfare recipients do not receive an average of $40,000 in yearly benefits.
At a recent debate, Republican gubernatorial candidate Ben Midgley cited Census Bureau data compiled by the Center of the American Experiment, a Minnesota conservative think tank. The center reported on “spending on public welfare per person in poverty,” though that metric isn’t searchable on the census site.
Welfare spending includes cash assistance, Medicaid-related payments to health care providers, administration and other services. Due to the cost of administering the programs, the amount the government spends does not equal the amount of benefits received.
On average each year in Maine, MaineCare enrollees receive $11,200, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program recipients $2,091 and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families cases $10,224.
A Mainer receiving the average amount of all three major benefits would get about $23,500.
This fact brief is responsive to conversations such as this one.
The Maine Trust for Local News partners with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. Read our methodology to learn how we check claims.
Sources:
- Center of the American Experiment: In 2023, Minnesota spent nearly $46,000 on welfare per person in poverty
- Maine Legislature: 2023-24 MaineCare and Related State-Funded Services
- Maine Department of Health and Human Services: Measures of Child and Family Economic Security for Families Participating in Maine’s Public Assistance Programs (Pg. 22)
- Maine Trust for Local News analysis: Maine Department of Health and Human Services’ 2025 Geographic Distribution of Programs and Benefits
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