SEP 06, 2019
Nancy Altman / Independent Media Institute
Senator Joni Ernst, R-Iowa,
just said out loud what Republican politicians usually only talk about in
secret meetings with their billionaire donors: The GOP wants to cut our earned
Social Security benefits—and they want to do it behind closed doors so that
they don’t have to pay the political price.
At a recent town hall,
Ernst stated that
Congress needs to “sit down behind closed doors” to “address Social Security.”
She vaguely asserted, “A lot of changes need to be made in this system going
forward.” But, she complained, if these changes were proposed in public, she
would be accused of pushing “granny over a cliff.” It is not hard to figure out
what “changes” she has in mind.
There are many “changes” that
should be made to strengthen Social Security and make it even better than it
already is. But none of those have to be done secretly.
Congress should address our
nation’s looming retirement income crisis by increasing Social Security’s
modest benefits. Congress should combat rising income and wealth inequality, by
requiring the wealthiest Americans to contribute to Social Security at the same
rate as the rest of us.
Congress should enact
caregiver credits for those who perform essential but unpaid labor caring for
their children, aged parents, and other family members. Those crucial
caregivers should receive credit toward future Social Security benefits so they
don’t retire into poverty.
In addition, Congress should
update the way that Social Security’s benefits are adjusted so that they
reflect the high health care and prescription drug costs that beneficiaries
experience. The annual cost of living adjustment is intended to keep benefits
from eroding, to allow beneficiaries to tread water. But without updating the
measure of inflation, those benefits are losing value each year.
Those are just some of the
improvements that Congress should make. But those are not the “changes” Ernst
has in mind, because none of those changes need to be done behind closed
doors. Numerous
pieces of legislation proposing those changes have been introduced in
Congress—though none by Senator Ernst or her Republican colleagues.
Indeed, 210 House Democrats
have co-sponsored the Social
Security 2100 Act, which expands Social Security’s modest benefits, while
ensuring that all benefits can be paid in full and on time through the year
2100 and beyond. Every Democratic presidential candidate opposes
cutting Social Security benefits, and nearly all support expanding them.
Meanwhile, neither Donald Trump nor a single Republican member of Congress is
sponsoring or cosponsoring any legislation that increases benefits or even
ensures that they can be paid in full and on time beyond 2035.
No action is the same as
supporting cuts. As Representative John Larson (D-CT), chairman of the House’s
Social Security Subcommittee and the author of the Social Security 2100
Act, has
explained, “The hard truth of the matter is that Republicans want to
cut Social Security, and doing nothing achieves their goal.”
Larson and his Democratic
colleagues are calling Republicans’ bluff. Under Democratic control, Congress
has held numerous hearings on Social Security and the importance of protecting
and expanding it. Larson and his Democratic colleagues are planning to have a
recorded, public vote on the Social Security 2100 Act this fall.
The legislation has enough
votes to pass the House of Representatives. But don’t expect Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell (R-KY) to bring it to a vote in the Senate. And don’t expect
Senator Ernst or her other Republican colleagues to urge him to do so.
With respect to Social
Security, just as with the issue of legislating background checks and other
overwhelmingly popular commonsense legislation to reduce the epidemic of gun
violence, Republican politicians will not say what they are for. In the case of
gun legislation, they block action. In the case of Social Security, they block
action unless Democrats agree to go behind closed doors so the public doesn’t
know who pushed the cuts.
We should not let Republican
politicians get by with platitudes about “saving” and “fixing” Social Security.
And we certainly shouldn’t let them hide behind closed doors and undermine our
Social Security.
As polarized as the American
people are over many issues, we are not polarized about Social Security.
Republicans, Democrats and Independents, of all ages, races and genders, overwhelmingly
agree. We understand that Social Security is more important than ever. We
overwhelmingly reject any cuts to its modest benefits.
The only group that disagrees
is Republican Party donors. As an ideological matter, they hate Social Security
because it puts the lie to their assertions that government can’t work. They do
not want to pay their fair share. Indeed, they would love to get their hands on
the money now flowing to Social Security.
When President George W. Bush
proposed destroying Social Security by privatizing it, the American people
overwhelmingly rejected his plan. But Republican politicians learned the wrong
lesson. As unpopular as Bush’s proposal was, he was at least willing to
advocate for it publicly. Rather than recognize the proposal was the problem,
Ernst and her fellow Republicans think the problem was being honest with the
American people.
Like Bush, they want to enact
a Social Security proposal that is deeply unpopular. But unlike Bush, they want
to enact it in the dark of night. Fortunately, their Democratic colleagues
won’t let them get away with that undemocratic act. Nor should the American
people.
All of us who have a stake in
Social Security—which is every one of us—should insist that those seeking our
vote tell us if they support expanding or cutting Social Security. If they
refuse to tell us, if they ramble on about their desire to “save” or “fix” or
“strengthen” Social Security in secret, we should draw the obvious inference:
They want to cut Social Security. We should use the election to ensure they do
not have the power to do that—and certainly not behind closed doors.
This article was produced
by Economy
for All, a project of the Independent
Media Institute.
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