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Blog2023-02-16T14:29:22-04:00
3005, 2023

Biden-McCarthy Debt Ceiling Deal Averts Disruption of Social Security, Medicare

By |May 30th, 2023|Congress, Debt Ceiling, Democrats, GOP, President Biden|

Amid all the static surrounding the debt ceiling deal that President Biden and Speaker McCarthy struck over the weekend, this much is certain: the deal is better for American seniors than a federal default. “The agreement represents a compromise, which means no one got everything they wanted,” said President Biden on Monday. “But that’s the responsibility of governing.” Many observers feel that the President and his party — and the American people — came out ahead.

“(The debt ceiling deal is) a win for Democrats, who sought to avoid having another debt limit showdown ahead of next year’s election. And they protected many programs that Republicans sought to slash.” – The Hill, 5/28/23

“Based on what we’ve learned about the Biden-McCarthy agreement so far, it looks to me as though Republicans got relatively less of what they wanted, while Democrats got relatively more.” – Eugene Robinson, Washington Post, 5/29/23

The alternative to this deal, a default on U.S. government debts, would not only have caused economic catastrophe; it would have disrupted the Social Security payments that millions of American seniors rely on to cover basic living expenses. Medicare payments likely also would be impacted by a default.

The deal’s 2-year freeze on “non-defense discretionary spending” may affect the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) operating budget, though the exact impact isn’t yet clear. SSA has been chronically underfunded since the Tea Party-fomented fiscal crisis in 2011. The spending cap in this deal means that SSA won’t have the funds needed to improve customer service.  However, the deal will have nowhere near the devastating impact of the 23% across-the-board spending cuts in the House GOP’s original debt ceiling bill. The same holds true for Older Americans Act programs (including nutrition and home heating assistance), which could have been slashed by the Republicans’ House-passed legislation.

“President Joe Biden has saved us from the political terrorism of MAGAnomics with… (a) debt ceiling deal that must be passed. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who was willing to sacrifice education, veterans benefits, and public safety in the interest of his own power, now has the onus to secure support for this deal from his caucus.” – Center for American Progress, 5/27/23

McCarthy has begun trying to whip his caucus to support the bill in the face of opposition from the party’s extreme MAGA wing. On Tuesday afternoon, the blow-it-all-up House Freedom Caucus declared its opposition to the deal, preferring to see the country edge perilously closer to default instead. It was this same Freedom Caucus crowd that insisted McCarthy refuse to bring a clean debt limit bill to the floor in the first place — in exchange for their support during his campaign to become Speaker.

Progressive Democrats in the House expressed concerns about the deal, largely centering on work requirements for federal food assistance (SNAP) beneficiaries aged 50-54 with no legal dependents. (The SNAP work requirement in the deal would sunset in 2030.) The deal includes new work requirement exemptions for SNAP recipients who are homeless or veterans.

The Democratic leadership in the House expects Speaker McCarthy to produce as many Republican votes in favor of the deal as he can, with Democrats presumably filling in the necessary votes to pass a bill. The odds of the deal passing the House depends on how many Democratic Progressives and House Freedom Caucus members vote against the compromise.

At the end of last week, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned that, without Congressional action to raise the debt ceiling, the nation would run out of money to pay its bills on time by June 5. That gives lawmakers only a handful of legislative days to enact the Biden-McCarthy deal. “We strongly encourage both chambers (of Congress) to enact the deal and send it to the President’s desk,” said OMB Director Shalanda Young at a press conference late Tuesday afternoon.


1705, 2023

Default Could Be Devastating to Seniors on Fixed Incomes

By |May 17th, 2023|Congress, Debt Ceiling, Joe Biden, Kevin McCarthy, Max Richtman, Medicare, Social Security|

As the country nears a projected federal default date as early as June 1, experts and advocates are warning that seniors’ benefits could be in jeopardy. A default would mean that the government will not be able to meet its financial obligations, resulting in delays for vital programs like Social Security and Medicare.

Here’s what Rae Hartley Beck of Forbes had to say on Monday:

“It’s never a good thing when politicians use the full faith and credit of the United States as a bargaining chip. But for the one in five Americans who receive a monthly check from Social Security, the current political standoff in our nation’s capital is nothing short of ominous.” – Rae Hartley Beck, Forbes, 5/15/23

The pressure on House Republicans and the Biden White House to reach a deal has never been higher.  Social Security expert Alicia Munnell weighed in on the subject in MarketWatch:

“The fact that some 13 million people have virtually no other source of income, a body of research suggests that timing is very important for cash strapped low-income households.” – attribution, Alicia Munnell,  Center for Retirement Research at Boston University, 5/15/23

The National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare has been issuing similar warnings for seniors to prepare for the worst, ever since Speaker McCarthy began a dangerous game of “chicken” by threatening not to lift the debt ceiling without massive concessions on spending.

Our director of government relations and policy, Dan Adcock, told NBC News:

“Seniors should be prepared if they’re financially able… so they have enough to tide them over.  But millions of beneficiaries have no financial room to maneuver” – Dan Adcock to NBC News, 5/13/23 

Adcock noted that about 40% of Social Security recipients, which include Americans who are disabled and those who are widowed, receive 90% of their income from Social Security. That equates to nearly 27 million people.

Meanwhile, our senior financial security expert, Maria Freese also warned CNBC, “With a default, there may be no money to send Social Security checks out.”

Mary Johnson, policy analyst with the Senior Citizens League, a nonpartisan advocacy group, said to NBC News, “the longer we wait and get close to default, the greater the risk to Social Security benefits being held up and delayed, or not paid in full.”

The National Committee has laid the blame for the debt crisis squarely on House Republicans’ shoulders. Not only would a default be disastrous for seniors on fixed incomes; McCarthy’s debt ceiling bill would slash funding for the Social Security Administration and several programs under the Older Americans Act that disadvantaged seniors rely on every day.

Our president and CEO Max Richtman sent a letter to Congress detailing the impacts of the House GOP bill on seniors:

“Speaker McCarthy’s debt ceiling bill would result in dramatic cuts to a wide range of programs essential to the health and well-being of our nation’s seniors.” – NCPSSM President Max Richtman, letter to U.S. Congress, 4/25/23

The impasse hangs politics over the heads of 65 million Americans who receive benefits through the Social Security program and the 63 million beneficiaries who receive health care through Medicare. The most vulnerable of America’s seniors are facing the most risk at an unprecedented scale.

The National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare stands with President Biden in his willingness to discuss the budget and deficits with Republicans, but we also support his strong opposition to the GOP holding the economy (and seniors’ earned benefits) hostage.


2704, 2023

Democrats Push for Strengthening Social Security in First Hearing of New Congress

By |April 27th, 2023|Congress, Democrats, Payroll Tax Cap, Rep. John Larson, Republicans, Social Security|

The first hearing of the new Congress on Social Security saw Republicans claiming that they simply want information about the program’s status, while Democrats insisted that it’s time to boost Social Security — and pushed back on GOP proposals to cut benefits.

“Today, we are faced with the fierce urgency of now. Five million Americans receive below-poverty level (Social Security) checks from their government because Congress has not enhanced benefits in more than 50 years,” said Rep. John Larson (D-CT), ranking member and former chairman of the House Ways and Means Social Security Subcommittee. “We need to protect and enhance this vital program, not cut it!”

In written testimony, NCPSSM President and CEO Max Richtman reminded subcommittee members that “Social Security is more than just a safety net program.  It is an earned benefit that provides families with insurance to help cover the loss of income if their primary breadwinner dies, becomes disabled or retires.”

The subcommittee, chaired by Rep. Drew Ferguson (R-GA), heard from three expert witnesses:  Stephen Goss (Chief Actuary at the Social Security Administration); Barry Huston (Analyst at the Congressional Research Service); and Dr. Phillip Swagel (Director of the Congressional Budget Office). Republicans pressed each witness for demographic and financial data about Social Security in the wake of the latest Trustees report projecting that the program’s combined trust fund will become depleted in 2034, absent Congressional action.

In his testimony, Chief Actuary Goss pointed out that the depletion date hasn’t really fluctuated much in the past decade or so.  “The projected date has been 2033 to 2035 for the past twelve years,” he said. “We’re simply getting closer to the date.”

Chief Actuary Stephen Goss says trust fund insolvency date hasn’t really changed much in 12 years

Congressional Republicans have seized on the trust fund’s insolvency date to advocate “reforms” to Social Security that ultimately would cut benefits – including raising the retirement age to 70, means testing, and adopting a more miserly COLA formula.

“The House Republican Study Committee proposed to raise the retirement age to 70 years old, reduce benefits for anyone earning over $60,000 a year, and privatize Social Security,” said Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-CA).  She accused Republicans of “trying to cut hard-earned benefits for working class families” and labeled GOP proposals for Social Security “reheated leftovers that keep making their way to the table.”

Subcommittee member Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-NJ) criticized Republican Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) for calling Social Security a “Ponzi scheme.”  The congressman offered a passionate defense of Social Security, saying that the program “has kept the American dream within sight for generations of families. And we know there are a lot of families who subsist on Social Security alone.”

Chairman Ferguson offered Rep. Pascrell the assurance that “the Senator from Wisconsin (Ron Johnson) will not be taking a vote on this subcommittee.” He promised that Republicans seek a “bipartisan approach,” adding, “I would like to put your minds at ease:  you won’t have to worry about voting on the Republican Study Committee plan on this subcommittee.”

Democrats, including Rep. Larson in the House and Bernie Sanders in the Senate, have offered legislation to strengthen Social Security’s finances and expand benefits – by asking the wealthy to contribute their fair share. Both Larson’s and Sanders’ bills would adjust the payroll wage cap to raise more revenue from high income earners. Under current law, wages above $160,200 are not subject to Social Security taxes.

Rep. Linda Sanchez: GOP proposals are “reheated leftovers that keep making their way to the table.”

Chief Actuary Goss’ testimony seemed to bolster the case for raising the payroll wage cap. He said that the percentage of wages captured by the payroll tax dropped from 90% in the early 80s to roughly 82% by the year 2000, “knocking down revenue we would have been getting.”  Goss attributed this gap to rising income inequality, with those near or above the “payroll tax maximum” earning increasingly higher wages during the past four decades than those below.

With nearly half of retirees depending on Social Security for all of their income, and many teetering on the brink of poverty even with their monthly benefit checks, the stakes could not be higher. “Social Security is a promise,” said Rep. Pascrell. “So, whatever changes we’re going to make, we better get it right.”

**** Watch the full Social Security Subcommittee hearing here ****


2404, 2023

Why GOP Medicaid Work Requirements Are Such an Awful Idea

By |April 24th, 2023|Kevin McCarthy, Medicaid, Medicaid Budget, Republicans|

The House Republicans’ debt ceiling bill includes drastic cuts to federal programs that seniors and other vulnerable Americans rely on. But it also imposes work requirements on lower income people who receive health coverage through Medicaid. Under the GOP plan, Medicaid patients would have to work at least 80 hours per month or lose their coverage.  We spoke to the National Committee’s senior health policy expert, Anne Montgomery, about why this is such a bad idea. 

Q:  Why is imposing work requirements on Medicaid patients such a harmful idea?

A:  It’s harmful because regardless of whether or not you’re working, everyone needs ongoing access to health care. Medicaid is a health insurance program for lower-income Americans, not a work program. It makes no sense to deny medical coverage to people by requiring them to prove to state bureaucrats that they are working. If you need care, you should be able to get it. To condition one upon the other makes no sense.

Q: Why shouldn’t Medicaid beneficiaries have to work in order to keep their benefits? 

A:  There are many people who may not be able to work due to chronic health conditions or disabilities. Or they may be taking care of loved ones who are sick. There are others who, because of the ‘gig economy,’ may be in and out of work and have trouble finding steady employment. Turnover is particularly high (and work hours inconsistent) in the service and retail sectors. Under the Republican proposal, if you don’t have consistent work, you may lose your health coverage.

Q:  Couldn’t some of these workers simply apply for disability insurance?

A: It’s not as simple as snapping your fingers, and you’re on disability.  First of all, only 40% of people who apply for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) actually are approved for benefits. Secondly, why would you want people to go onto disability insurance if the aim is to encourage work?

Q: With these work requirements comes a lot of new ‘red tape.’ How might this be an obstacle to people trying to keep their Medicaid coverage?

A: Yes. Not only would you have to be working – or find work – in order to keep your health coverage, you would have to meet strict documentation requirements, which involves additional red tape and paperwork. In pilot programs for Medicaid work requirements, people have lost coverage because of confusion rather than not working. Medicaid beneficiaries should work when they can, but we shouldn’t yank their health care from under them if they can’t work at a particular time.

Q: Would Medicaid work requirements seriously increase the number of Americans working?

There is no evidence that Medicaid work requirements actually would boost employment. In states which have experimented with work requirements, that certainly isn’t the case. In Arkansas, for instance, 17,000 patients lost Medicaid coverage for failing to meet the requirements. An analysis found that “Medicaid beneficiaries had not started working more or earning more money as a result of the policy.”

Q: What is the real agenda behind Medicaid work requirements?

Conservatives have long opposed Medicaid as “just another welfare program” and a “waste of taxpayer dollars,” while in reality it is a crucial part of our health care system that pays for coverage for tens of millions of lower-income Americans — and the hospitals, doctors and nursing homes who care for them. In fact, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS), more than 92 million Americans were enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP (in the 50 states and the District of Columbia that reported enrollment data for December 2022).   The GOP was especially upset by Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act (though many red states now have expanded their Medicaid programs under the ACA). Imposing work requirements is a way to drastically reduce the number of Americans on Medicaid rolls, with no regard for the impact on patients’ health.

Q: The Republicans’ work requirement proposals come at a particularly fraught time, as federal COVID emergency measures come to an end, right? 

A: That’s right. Under the Public Health Emergency (PHE) state Medicaid programs were required to keep people continuously enrolled in exchange for additional federal funding. With the PHE phaseout that begin this month, millions of Americans will now have to go through a “redetermination” of their eligibility for Medicaid coverage for the first time in 3 years.  Imposing work requirements at the same time that many are already losing access to Medicaid coverage is punitive and unnecessary. Republicans are effectively using this process as an opening to slash federal spending on a constituency that they believe doesn’t have a lot of political power.


1204, 2023

Ohio Forum Focuses on Cutting Vs. Expanding Social Security

By |April 12th, 2023|Bernie Sanders, Boost Social Security, Democrats, GOP, Rep. John Larson, Social Security|


National Committee president and CEO Max Richtman brought the organization’s message of expanding and strengthening Social Security to Ohio today.  He participated in a forum in Sandusky, OH, co-sponsored by the local nonprofit, Serving Our Seniors. The forum, entitled, The Future of Social Security Retirement Income, was attended by more than two hundred citizens, mostly seniors who are already collecting benefits.  [WATCH THE FORUM HERE.]

Richtman appeared alongside Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-OH), a champion for seniors who represents the Sandusky area in the U.S. Congress. (Rep. Kaptur earned 100% on the National Committee’s most recent legislative scorecard.) The forum was moderated by Sue Daugherty, executive director of Serving Our Seniors, and also included a representative of the conservative/libertarian Cato institute, Romina Boccia.  According to the site, Influence Watch,  the Cato Institute “has received funding from a number of right-of-center organizations, including the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation.”

“This forum isn’t about politics of it. It’s all about informing all of us of the realities of it. How will we, as a nation, sustain these important programs? That’s the big question and our panel crosses across the spectrum of politics.” – Sue Daugherty, moderator and CEO, Serving Our Seniors

The forum featured lively exchanges between audience members and panelists, with Richtman advocating for revenue-side solutions to Social Security’s financial challenges. (The combined trust fund is projected to become depleted in 2034, absent Congressional action.)

Boccia urged the kind of reform championed by conservatives, including reducing benefits for future generations of retirees, at least partially privatizing the program, and the creation of a special commission to propose Social Security reforms (presumably along the lines of the Simpson-Bowles commission in the 2010s). That commission’s recommendations, including some benefit cuts, were never adopted.

Richtman made clear NCPSSM’s opposition to the kinds of solutions offered by Boccia, especially benefit cuts for future retirees, who will rely on Social Security even more than today’s seniors do.

“Our message is that Congress needs to act. If there’s no action, that’s not acceptable because there would be automatic cuts in 2034. What we favor is bringing more revenue by having the wealthy begin paying their fair share. And in exchange for contributing more, higher earners should realize higher benefits than they do now. It’s important to maintain that fundamental principle of Social Security.” – Max Richtman, NCPSSM President & CEO

Richtman endorsed legislation from Senator Bernie Sanders and Rep. John Larson (who soon will be re-introducing his Social Security 2100 Act), both of which would bring more revenue into Social Security by adjusting the payroll wage cap – and in Sanders’ case – using investment taxes to help shore up the program.  Both Sanders’ and Larson’s bills also would boost benefits across-the-board, in addition to targeted increases for the most financially vulnerable seniors.

According to Richtman, most of the audience at the forum seemed to support the push to expand and strengthen Social Security, rather than cutting benefits or privatizing the program. Polling bears this out. A recent Data for Progress poll indicates that a majority of voters across party lines oppose raising the retirement age for today’s younger adults – a prominent GOP proposal of late. Other polling shows significant bipartisan support for expanding benefits by having the wealthy contribute more. (Earnings over $160,200 are not currently subject to Social Security payroll taxes.)

Republicans have generally rejected revenue-based solutions, insisting that “entitlements” need to be “reformed” or “looked at” (in other words, cut) in order to reduce federal debt, even though Social Security is self-funded and does not contribute a penny of red ink. The Sandusky Register newspaper reported that, despite the Cato Institute’s presence at the forum, other conservatives did not accept invitations to participate, including freshman Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) and the DC-based Heritage Foundation.


Biden-McCarthy Debt Ceiling Deal Averts Disruption of Social Security, Medicare

By |May 30th, 2023|Congress, Debt Ceiling, Democrats, GOP, President Biden|

Amid all the static surrounding the debt ceiling deal that President Biden and Speaker McCarthy struck over the weekend, this much is certain: the deal is better for American seniors than a federal default. “The agreement represents a compromise, which means no one got everything they wanted,” said President Biden on Monday. “But that’s the responsibility of governing.” Many observers feel that the President and his party — and the American people — came out ahead.

“(The debt ceiling deal is) a win for Democrats, who sought to avoid having another debt limit showdown ahead of next year’s election. And they protected many programs that Republicans sought to slash.” – The Hill, 5/28/23

“Based on what we’ve learned about the Biden-McCarthy agreement so far, it looks to me as though Republicans got relatively less of what they wanted, while Democrats got relatively more.” – Eugene Robinson, Washington Post, 5/29/23

The alternative to this deal, a default on U.S. government debts, would not only have caused economic catastrophe; it would have disrupted the Social Security payments that millions of American seniors rely on to cover basic living expenses. Medicare payments likely also would be impacted by a default.

The deal’s 2-year freeze on “non-defense discretionary spending” may affect the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) operating budget, though the exact impact isn’t yet clear. SSA has been chronically underfunded since the Tea Party-fomented fiscal crisis in 2011. The spending cap in this deal means that SSA won’t have the funds needed to improve customer service.  However, the deal will have nowhere near the devastating impact of the 23% across-the-board spending cuts in the House GOP’s original debt ceiling bill. The same holds true for Older Americans Act programs (including nutrition and home heating assistance), which could have been slashed by the Republicans’ House-passed legislation.

“President Joe Biden has saved us from the political terrorism of MAGAnomics with… (a) debt ceiling deal that must be passed. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who was willing to sacrifice education, veterans benefits, and public safety in the interest of his own power, now has the onus to secure support for this deal from his caucus.” – Center for American Progress, 5/27/23

McCarthy has begun trying to whip his caucus to support the bill in the face of opposition from the party’s extreme MAGA wing. On Tuesday afternoon, the blow-it-all-up House Freedom Caucus declared its opposition to the deal, preferring to see the country edge perilously closer to default instead. It was this same Freedom Caucus crowd that insisted McCarthy refuse to bring a clean debt limit bill to the floor in the first place — in exchange for their support during his campaign to become Speaker.

Progressive Democrats in the House expressed concerns about the deal, largely centering on work requirements for federal food assistance (SNAP) beneficiaries aged 50-54 with no legal dependents. (The SNAP work requirement in the deal would sunset in 2030.) The deal includes new work requirement exemptions for SNAP recipients who are homeless or veterans.

The Democratic leadership in the House expects Speaker McCarthy to produce as many Republican votes in favor of the deal as he can, with Democrats presumably filling in the necessary votes to pass a bill. The odds of the deal passing the House depends on how many Democratic Progressives and House Freedom Caucus members vote against the compromise.

At the end of last week, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned that, without Congressional action to raise the debt ceiling, the nation would run out of money to pay its bills on time by June 5. That gives lawmakers only a handful of legislative days to enact the Biden-McCarthy deal. “We strongly encourage both chambers (of Congress) to enact the deal and send it to the President’s desk,” said OMB Director Shalanda Young at a press conference late Tuesday afternoon.


Default Could Be Devastating to Seniors on Fixed Incomes

By |May 17th, 2023|Congress, Debt Ceiling, Joe Biden, Kevin McCarthy, Max Richtman, Medicare, Social Security|

As the country nears a projected federal default date as early as June 1, experts and advocates are warning that seniors’ benefits could be in jeopardy. A default would mean that the government will not be able to meet its financial obligations, resulting in delays for vital programs like Social Security and Medicare.

Here’s what Rae Hartley Beck of Forbes had to say on Monday:

“It’s never a good thing when politicians use the full faith and credit of the United States as a bargaining chip. But for the one in five Americans who receive a monthly check from Social Security, the current political standoff in our nation’s capital is nothing short of ominous.” – Rae Hartley Beck, Forbes, 5/15/23

The pressure on House Republicans and the Biden White House to reach a deal has never been higher.  Social Security expert Alicia Munnell weighed in on the subject in MarketWatch:

“The fact that some 13 million people have virtually no other source of income, a body of research suggests that timing is very important for cash strapped low-income households.” – attribution, Alicia Munnell,  Center for Retirement Research at Boston University, 5/15/23

The National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare has been issuing similar warnings for seniors to prepare for the worst, ever since Speaker McCarthy began a dangerous game of “chicken” by threatening not to lift the debt ceiling without massive concessions on spending.

Our director of government relations and policy, Dan Adcock, told NBC News:

“Seniors should be prepared if they’re financially able… so they have enough to tide them over.  But millions of beneficiaries have no financial room to maneuver” – Dan Adcock to NBC News, 5/13/23 

Adcock noted that about 40% of Social Security recipients, which include Americans who are disabled and those who are widowed, receive 90% of their income from Social Security. That equates to nearly 27 million people.

Meanwhile, our senior financial security expert, Maria Freese also warned CNBC, “With a default, there may be no money to send Social Security checks out.”

Mary Johnson, policy analyst with the Senior Citizens League, a nonpartisan advocacy group, said to NBC News, “the longer we wait and get close to default, the greater the risk to Social Security benefits being held up and delayed, or not paid in full.”

The National Committee has laid the blame for the debt crisis squarely on House Republicans’ shoulders. Not only would a default be disastrous for seniors on fixed incomes; McCarthy’s debt ceiling bill would slash funding for the Social Security Administration and several programs under the Older Americans Act that disadvantaged seniors rely on every day.

Our president and CEO Max Richtman sent a letter to Congress detailing the impacts of the House GOP bill on seniors:

“Speaker McCarthy’s debt ceiling bill would result in dramatic cuts to a wide range of programs essential to the health and well-being of our nation’s seniors.” – NCPSSM President Max Richtman, letter to U.S. Congress, 4/25/23

The impasse hangs politics over the heads of 65 million Americans who receive benefits through the Social Security program and the 63 million beneficiaries who receive health care through Medicare. The most vulnerable of America’s seniors are facing the most risk at an unprecedented scale.

The National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare stands with President Biden in his willingness to discuss the budget and deficits with Republicans, but we also support his strong opposition to the GOP holding the economy (and seniors’ earned benefits) hostage.


Democrats Push for Strengthening Social Security in First Hearing of New Congress

By |April 27th, 2023|Congress, Democrats, Payroll Tax Cap, Rep. John Larson, Republicans, Social Security|

The first hearing of the new Congress on Social Security saw Republicans claiming that they simply want information about the program’s status, while Democrats insisted that it’s time to boost Social Security — and pushed back on GOP proposals to cut benefits.

“Today, we are faced with the fierce urgency of now. Five million Americans receive below-poverty level (Social Security) checks from their government because Congress has not enhanced benefits in more than 50 years,” said Rep. John Larson (D-CT), ranking member and former chairman of the House Ways and Means Social Security Subcommittee. “We need to protect and enhance this vital program, not cut it!”

In written testimony, NCPSSM President and CEO Max Richtman reminded subcommittee members that “Social Security is more than just a safety net program.  It is an earned benefit that provides families with insurance to help cover the loss of income if their primary breadwinner dies, becomes disabled or retires.”

The subcommittee, chaired by Rep. Drew Ferguson (R-GA), heard from three expert witnesses:  Stephen Goss (Chief Actuary at the Social Security Administration); Barry Huston (Analyst at the Congressional Research Service); and Dr. Phillip Swagel (Director of the Congressional Budget Office). Republicans pressed each witness for demographic and financial data about Social Security in the wake of the latest Trustees report projecting that the program’s combined trust fund will become depleted in 2034, absent Congressional action.

In his testimony, Chief Actuary Goss pointed out that the depletion date hasn’t really fluctuated much in the past decade or so.  “The projected date has been 2033 to 2035 for the past twelve years,” he said. “We’re simply getting closer to the date.”

Chief Actuary Stephen Goss says trust fund insolvency date hasn’t really changed much in 12 years

Congressional Republicans have seized on the trust fund’s insolvency date to advocate “reforms” to Social Security that ultimately would cut benefits – including raising the retirement age to 70, means testing, and adopting a more miserly COLA formula.

“The House Republican Study Committee proposed to raise the retirement age to 70 years old, reduce benefits for anyone earning over $60,000 a year, and privatize Social Security,” said Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-CA).  She accused Republicans of “trying to cut hard-earned benefits for working class families” and labeled GOP proposals for Social Security “reheated leftovers that keep making their way to the table.”

Subcommittee member Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-NJ) criticized Republican Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) for calling Social Security a “Ponzi scheme.”  The congressman offered a passionate defense of Social Security, saying that the program “has kept the American dream within sight for generations of families. And we know there are a lot of families who subsist on Social Security alone.”

Chairman Ferguson offered Rep. Pascrell the assurance that “the Senator from Wisconsin (Ron Johnson) will not be taking a vote on this subcommittee.” He promised that Republicans seek a “bipartisan approach,” adding, “I would like to put your minds at ease:  you won’t have to worry about voting on the Republican Study Committee plan on this subcommittee.”

Democrats, including Rep. Larson in the House and Bernie Sanders in the Senate, have offered legislation to strengthen Social Security’s finances and expand benefits – by asking the wealthy to contribute their fair share. Both Larson’s and Sanders’ bills would adjust the payroll wage cap to raise more revenue from high income earners. Under current law, wages above $160,200 are not subject to Social Security taxes.

Rep. Linda Sanchez: GOP proposals are “reheated leftovers that keep making their way to the table.”

Chief Actuary Goss’ testimony seemed to bolster the case for raising the payroll wage cap. He said that the percentage of wages captured by the payroll tax dropped from 90% in the early 80s to roughly 82% by the year 2000, “knocking down revenue we would have been getting.”  Goss attributed this gap to rising income inequality, with those near or above the “payroll tax maximum” earning increasingly higher wages during the past four decades than those below.

With nearly half of retirees depending on Social Security for all of their income, and many teetering on the brink of poverty even with their monthly benefit checks, the stakes could not be higher. “Social Security is a promise,” said Rep. Pascrell. “So, whatever changes we’re going to make, we better get it right.”

**** Watch the full Social Security Subcommittee hearing here ****


Why GOP Medicaid Work Requirements Are Such an Awful Idea

By |April 24th, 2023|Kevin McCarthy, Medicaid, Medicaid Budget, Republicans|

The House Republicans’ debt ceiling bill includes drastic cuts to federal programs that seniors and other vulnerable Americans rely on. But it also imposes work requirements on lower income people who receive health coverage through Medicaid. Under the GOP plan, Medicaid patients would have to work at least 80 hours per month or lose their coverage.  We spoke to the National Committee’s senior health policy expert, Anne Montgomery, about why this is such a bad idea. 

Q:  Why is imposing work requirements on Medicaid patients such a harmful idea?

A:  It’s harmful because regardless of whether or not you’re working, everyone needs ongoing access to health care. Medicaid is a health insurance program for lower-income Americans, not a work program. It makes no sense to deny medical coverage to people by requiring them to prove to state bureaucrats that they are working. If you need care, you should be able to get it. To condition one upon the other makes no sense.

Q: Why shouldn’t Medicaid beneficiaries have to work in order to keep their benefits? 

A:  There are many people who may not be able to work due to chronic health conditions or disabilities. Or they may be taking care of loved ones who are sick. There are others who, because of the ‘gig economy,’ may be in and out of work and have trouble finding steady employment. Turnover is particularly high (and work hours inconsistent) in the service and retail sectors. Under the Republican proposal, if you don’t have consistent work, you may lose your health coverage.

Q:  Couldn’t some of these workers simply apply for disability insurance?

A: It’s not as simple as snapping your fingers, and you’re on disability.  First of all, only 40% of people who apply for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) actually are approved for benefits. Secondly, why would you want people to go onto disability insurance if the aim is to encourage work?

Q: With these work requirements comes a lot of new ‘red tape.’ How might this be an obstacle to people trying to keep their Medicaid coverage?

A: Yes. Not only would you have to be working – or find work – in order to keep your health coverage, you would have to meet strict documentation requirements, which involves additional red tape and paperwork. In pilot programs for Medicaid work requirements, people have lost coverage because of confusion rather than not working. Medicaid beneficiaries should work when they can, but we shouldn’t yank their health care from under them if they can’t work at a particular time.

Q: Would Medicaid work requirements seriously increase the number of Americans working?

There is no evidence that Medicaid work requirements actually would boost employment. In states which have experimented with work requirements, that certainly isn’t the case. In Arkansas, for instance, 17,000 patients lost Medicaid coverage for failing to meet the requirements. An analysis found that “Medicaid beneficiaries had not started working more or earning more money as a result of the policy.”

Q: What is the real agenda behind Medicaid work requirements?

Conservatives have long opposed Medicaid as “just another welfare program” and a “waste of taxpayer dollars,” while in reality it is a crucial part of our health care system that pays for coverage for tens of millions of lower-income Americans — and the hospitals, doctors and nursing homes who care for them. In fact, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS), more than 92 million Americans were enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP (in the 50 states and the District of Columbia that reported enrollment data for December 2022).   The GOP was especially upset by Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act (though many red states now have expanded their Medicaid programs under the ACA). Imposing work requirements is a way to drastically reduce the number of Americans on Medicaid rolls, with no regard for the impact on patients’ health.

Q: The Republicans’ work requirement proposals come at a particularly fraught time, as federal COVID emergency measures come to an end, right? 

A: That’s right. Under the Public Health Emergency (PHE) state Medicaid programs were required to keep people continuously enrolled in exchange for additional federal funding. With the PHE phaseout that begin this month, millions of Americans will now have to go through a “redetermination” of their eligibility for Medicaid coverage for the first time in 3 years.  Imposing work requirements at the same time that many are already losing access to Medicaid coverage is punitive and unnecessary. Republicans are effectively using this process as an opening to slash federal spending on a constituency that they believe doesn’t have a lot of political power.


Ohio Forum Focuses on Cutting Vs. Expanding Social Security

By |April 12th, 2023|Bernie Sanders, Boost Social Security, Democrats, GOP, Rep. John Larson, Social Security|


National Committee president and CEO Max Richtman brought the organization’s message of expanding and strengthening Social Security to Ohio today.  He participated in a forum in Sandusky, OH, co-sponsored by the local nonprofit, Serving Our Seniors. The forum, entitled, The Future of Social Security Retirement Income, was attended by more than two hundred citizens, mostly seniors who are already collecting benefits.  [WATCH THE FORUM HERE.]

Richtman appeared alongside Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-OH), a champion for seniors who represents the Sandusky area in the U.S. Congress. (Rep. Kaptur earned 100% on the National Committee’s most recent legislative scorecard.) The forum was moderated by Sue Daugherty, executive director of Serving Our Seniors, and also included a representative of the conservative/libertarian Cato institute, Romina Boccia.  According to the site, Influence Watch,  the Cato Institute “has received funding from a number of right-of-center organizations, including the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation.”

“This forum isn’t about politics of it. It’s all about informing all of us of the realities of it. How will we, as a nation, sustain these important programs? That’s the big question and our panel crosses across the spectrum of politics.” – Sue Daugherty, moderator and CEO, Serving Our Seniors

The forum featured lively exchanges between audience members and panelists, with Richtman advocating for revenue-side solutions to Social Security’s financial challenges. (The combined trust fund is projected to become depleted in 2034, absent Congressional action.)

Boccia urged the kind of reform championed by conservatives, including reducing benefits for future generations of retirees, at least partially privatizing the program, and the creation of a special commission to propose Social Security reforms (presumably along the lines of the Simpson-Bowles commission in the 2010s). That commission’s recommendations, including some benefit cuts, were never adopted.

Richtman made clear NCPSSM’s opposition to the kinds of solutions offered by Boccia, especially benefit cuts for future retirees, who will rely on Social Security even more than today’s seniors do.

“Our message is that Congress needs to act. If there’s no action, that’s not acceptable because there would be automatic cuts in 2034. What we favor is bringing more revenue by having the wealthy begin paying their fair share. And in exchange for contributing more, higher earners should realize higher benefits than they do now. It’s important to maintain that fundamental principle of Social Security.” – Max Richtman, NCPSSM President & CEO

Richtman endorsed legislation from Senator Bernie Sanders and Rep. John Larson (who soon will be re-introducing his Social Security 2100 Act), both of which would bring more revenue into Social Security by adjusting the payroll wage cap – and in Sanders’ case – using investment taxes to help shore up the program.  Both Sanders’ and Larson’s bills also would boost benefits across-the-board, in addition to targeted increases for the most financially vulnerable seniors.

According to Richtman, most of the audience at the forum seemed to support the push to expand and strengthen Social Security, rather than cutting benefits or privatizing the program. Polling bears this out. A recent Data for Progress poll indicates that a majority of voters across party lines oppose raising the retirement age for today’s younger adults – a prominent GOP proposal of late. Other polling shows significant bipartisan support for expanding benefits by having the wealthy contribute more. (Earnings over $160,200 are not currently subject to Social Security payroll taxes.)

Republicans have generally rejected revenue-based solutions, insisting that “entitlements” need to be “reformed” or “looked at” (in other words, cut) in order to reduce federal debt, even though Social Security is self-funded and does not contribute a penny of red ink. The Sandusky Register newspaper reported that, despite the Cato Institute’s presence at the forum, other conservatives did not accept invitations to participate, including freshman Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) and the DC-based Heritage Foundation.



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