Monday, September 26, 2022

Republicans just can't help themselves. They have to talk about cutting Social Security and Medicare

US Senator Ron Johnson speaks during the second day of the Republican National Convention at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland on July 19, 2016. (Photo by JIM WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)
That mouth of Ron Johnson—he just can't shut it.

Republicans just can’t help themselves. They just can’t stop talking about how they want to end Social Security and Medicare. Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) did it when he released his dystopian platform that would sunset the programs after five years. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) has a plan to put the programs on the chopping block every year, making them compete with all the other programs and, inevitably, face cuts.

However hard Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has worked to make these guys shut up about Social Security and Medicare, these guys just won’t. He slapped back at Scott’s plan, saying, “We will not have as part of our agenda a bill that raises taxes on half the American people and sunsets Social Security and Medicare within five years. That will not be part of the Republican Senate Majority Agenda.”

A few months later, up pops Sen. Lindsey Graham arguing that because “we are not a social nation,” we need to start making some cuts. “Entitlement reform is a must for us to not become Greece,” he said in a June debate with Sen. Bernie Sanders. By “reform,” he means cutting benefits and disqualifying people.

McConnell doesn’t just have these guys to deal with—he’s got a bunch of would-be senators running for office who also just can’t stop going there. Even when they know it turns off voters and alienates the people they need the most: older voters.

Take New Hampshire’s nominee for the Senate, Don Bolduc. He told an August town meeting crowd that privatizing Medicare “is hugely important,” and said that he often talks about how important it is to “reform” Medicare and Medicaid, “Getting government out of it, getting government money with strings attached out of it.”

Bolduc’s spokesperson, Jimmy Thompson, insisted to Politico that since Bolduc made that statement six weeks ago, he’s changed his mind and now opposes privatizing Medicare, as well as Social Security and Medicaid. That’s quite the reversal for the guy who insisted he always tells people how important “getting government out of it” is.

Then there’s Arizona candidate Blake Masters, the guy who keeps wrecking McConnell’s train in that state. Back in June, he said in a candidate forum “We need fresh and innovative thinking. […] Maybe we should privatize Social Security. Private retirement accounts, get the government out of it.” As if Republicans haven’t been talking about doing that for decades—“fresh” thinking. A few months later, he called Social Security and Medicare “the Gordian knot” that has to be cut for younger generations.

At least he didn’t make his spokesperson walk those statements back. Last month he revised that. Okay, he more than revised it. He reversed it. “I do not want to privatize Social Security,” he told azcentral. “I think, in context, I was talking about something very different.” It’s hard to see how “we should privatize Social Security” can be understood in any other context, but sure.

He really doubled down on this effort to convince us he’s really reformed and would never, ever think again about privatizing these programs or harming them. “We can’t change the system. We can’t pull the rug out from seniors. I will never, ever support cutting Social Security,” he insisted. Of course, this was also the guy who was  “100% pro-life” until he wasn’t. He might just be lying here.

And in Ohio, J.D. Vance once cut his political teeth on arguing that “Medicare and Social Security […] are the biggest roadblocks to any kind of real fiscal sanity.” Now, he told HuffPost via email, “I don’t support cuts to social security [sic] or Medicare and think privatizing social security is a bad idea.” Sure.

If it’s any consolation to McConnell, and it’s probably not because good lord what are these people thinking, House GOP leadership has joined the bandwagon with their “Commitment to America” plan that was accidentally prematurely leaked Wednesday.

The platform promises to  “save and strengthen Social Security and Medicare,” though it gives no details on what exactly that means. But they already worked it out, as HuffPost explains. They had a June meeting of the Republicans on the Ways and Means Committee where the discussed cutting both coverage and benefits to seniors under the programs. Also the Republican Study Committee has put out its proposed 2023 budget that massively cuts Social Security.

Just to make sure seniors understand that Republicans really don’t want to help them, the new plan from leadership attacks the Medicare drug cost-cutting provision in the new Inflation Reduction Act as a “drug takeover scheme” that “could lead to 135 fewer lifesaving treatments and cures.” That’s a very specific number of future drugs that won’t be available. Which suggests they are just making shit up to try to scare people into thinking that saving money on their prescriptions is actually a bad thing.

There’s actually one party in America that has proven itself ready and willing to end Social Security and Medicare as we know them: the Republicans. Under former President George W. Bush they tried, really hard, to privatize Social Security. And failed miserably. But they just can’t give it up. They won’t give it up.

Which means we just have to keep electing more and better Democrats to keep them at bay.

"They Can't Take That Away From Me": Oh yes they can, and that's exactly what a Republican congress has promised to do.  And they don't care that you paid for it.

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