"Congress Social Security 'Reform' Means Cuts," Say Robert Weiner, Ex-House Aging Comm. Chief Of Staff And Autumn Kelly, Policy Analyst, In Palm Beach Post Op-Ed
WASHINGTON and PALM BEACH, Fla., Feb. 18, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- "Congress' Social Security 'reform' means cuts," say former Chief of Staff of the U.S. House Aging Committee and ex-White House spokesman, Robert Weiner, and senior policy analyst Autumn Kelly in an op-ed published in the Palm Beach Post in Wednesday's paper. They write, "Congress needs to be constantly reminded: Quit messing with Social Security."
The authors warn of "three dangerous signals that Congress intends to chip away at the Social Security Fund:"
"Multi-employer pension funds were cut under the recent spending bill passed by both chambers; The House blocked transferring funds from Social Security to its Disability section (though done 11 times previously); And members from both parties are proposing to pass a cost-of-living-adjustment that would reduce payments by $1,000 annually for seniors."
Weiner and Kelly assert that "Floridians will be especially hard-hit. Three million Florida residents are over 65. One in five Florida residents receive Social Security benefits."
The authors reference a January NBC poll that reported fifty-four percent of Americans support 'reforming' Social Security. "It's a case of the pollsters following the political nomenclature. Call it 'reform' and people will vote for it. Other polls call it what it is--cuts--and vast majorities (they cite a 2013 Pulse Opinion Research poll said about 70 percent) oppose Social Security and Medicare cuts to reduce U.S. debts and deficits."
Weiner and Kelly contend, "Yet Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., Chairman of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, keeps the fear assault going." In the 2015 budget resolution he wrote, Ryan purports, "The trust fund is not a real savings account...Any value in the balances in the Social Security Trust Fund is derived from dubious government accounting."
Weiner and Kelly counter, "Funny, retirees aren't told that as they contribute. The fact is, there is a $1.7 trillion surplus in the Social Security Trust Fund--based on inflow from retirees and outflow of payments."
They contend that "Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, adds to the angst. Rubio said in little noticed comments to the National Press Club last year: 'Social Security is wobbling and 'The Social Security trust fund is drying up.'" They quote Rubio as fear-mongering when he asserted that there is "a real and looming crisis."
The authors emphasize that "the Social Security Trust Fund, according to its own website, is solvent through 2033 from the stockpile of payments into it. And even after that, it is 75 percent to 80 percent solvent. Even after 2033, the equivalent of a third of past annual Iraq War costs would make up the difference. It's an easy congressional fix, without cuts. The fears are hype."
Weiner and Kelly point out that likely 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton takes a different approach. "She has asked how members of Congress could 'find money for 100 more years in Iraq and tax cuts for the wealthiest, but not for Social Security.'" She added that passage of Republican budgets would have "turned Social Security's guarantee into a stock market gamble for millions of Americans." Weiner and Kelly point out that "Social Security provides 57 million seniors more than half of their income, and has reduced the number of seniors in poverty by a 50 percent."
They recall the spending bill passed in December that cuts multi-employer pension funds and puts about a million workers at risk, and note that "These pensions were federally protected. Now, according to the Pension Rights Center, a worker who receives $25,000 a year could see a cut of $13,000--over half."
The authors also write that congressional pushes for "changing Social Security to use a so-called 'chained' Consumer Price Index (CPI) will cost seniors $1,000 per year by substituting the cheapest brands as the calculation--but that's what fixed-income seniors already buy, so it's just taking away their money." They mention that Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren said in 2013 that switching to "chained CPI falls short of the actual increases in costs that seniors face. It's just a fancy way of saying cut benefits."
Weiner and Kelly conclude, "Social Security's invested cash surplus from seniors has been borrowed by the government to finance the deficit, pay for tax breaks for the rich and fund other programs." But, they assert today, "When any bank, financial institution, or organization uses your money for other purposes, they still owe you the money." They say that "Former Vice President Al Gore was right years ago: a 'lockbox' is needed to separate Social Security funds from the Treasury to protect seniors' money."
Robert Weiner was Chief of Staff of the U.S. House Aging Committee under Chairman Claude Pepper (D-FL) and was a spokesman for the Clinton White House. Autumn Kelly is a senior policy analyst for Robert Weiner Associates and Solutions for Change.
LINK TO ARTICLE, "CONGRESS' SOCIAL SECURITY 'REFORM' MEANS CUTS" http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/news/opinion/commentary-congress-social-security-reform-means-c/nkCsX/
Contact: Bob Weiner or Autumn Kelly, 301-283-0821 cell 202-306-1200, [email protected]
SOURCE Robert Weiner Associates; Solutions for Change
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