‘The View’ hosts criticize President Trump for the idea of giving expecting mothers a $5k bonus
4 mins
During Wednesdayโs episode of The View, the co-hosts sharply criticized former President Donald Trump over his recent support for the idea of offering mothers a $5,000 bonus for having children.
The segment began with co-host Whoopi Goldberg, who voiced deep frustration with the notion, which Trump casually endorsed earlier this week after being asked whether the government should consider incentivizing childbirth.
โSounds like a good idea to me,โ Trump had responded during the Q&A. But the co-hosts werenโt buying it.
Whoopi Goldberg: โDo They Know How Womenโs Bodies Work?โ
Goldberg sarcastically opened the segment by saying she was โincredibly insultedโ by the idea and slammed the Trump administration for lacking a true understanding of womenโs needs.
โIt is not anybody elseโs responsibility but mine to make sure I keep my payments up,โ she said, referring to Social Security. โBut let me talk about some of the things that the administration has slashedโฆ $5,000 sounds like a lot, but if you canโt pay your rent or for after-school programs, what does it matter?โ
Goldberg went on to list several funding cuts made during Trumpโs previous administration, including reductions to education and food assistance programs, which she argued undermine the basic support systems families need after children are born.
โWhy not make sure the kids we already have get a shot at good schooling?โ she added.
Alyssa Farah Griffin: โWould We Feel Different If Biden Proposed It?โ
Co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin, a former Trump White House staffer, offered a more nuanced take, asking whether the reaction would have been different if President Joe Biden had made a similar proposal.
โI feel like if Biden proposed this, we would all be saying itโs groundbreaking,โ she remarked, suggesting the idea itself wasnโt inherently negative but perhaps poorly framed.
Sunny Hostin: โWho Are They Trying to Incentivize?โ
Co-host Sunny Hostin took the discussion a step further, questioning the demographic motivations behind the proposal. She referenced data showing a 1% increase in U.S. births in 2024 โ a rise driven largely by Hispanic and Asian mothers.
โThey donโt seem to be concerned about that increase,โ Hostin said. โThey seem more concerned about a decrease in other populations.โ
She implied that the proposal might be selectively aimed at encouraging births among white Americans, subtly pointing to historical patterns of demographic targeting.