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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Thu Feb 20, 2014, 04:51 PM Feb 2014

GOP’s Social Security disaster: Conservatives just lost their chance to cut benefits


The president dropping "chained-CPI" from his budget is a reprieve for the left -- and a message to the right

BRIAN BEUTLER


Back in November 2012, with the Bush tax cuts scheduled to expire and sequestration looming, liberals were divided among two and a half significant schools of strategic thought.

One (mine) was that President Obama should let all of the cuts expire, allow sequestration to kick in, then return from a restful Christmas break with an “Obama tax cut” bill in hand. As a gesture of good will to Republicans, that bill would have reinstated all of the Bush tax cuts for the first big chunk of everyone’s income, but in return they’d have to agree to rescind sequestration entirely, and partially offset the cost of all this new spending and tax cutting with a cap on tax expenditures for high earners.

The other (and a half) was that Obama should cut a deal of some kind before the New Year’s “cliff.” Some of the people in this camp believed Obama should pocket the expiration of the Bush tax cuts for top earners and call it a day, fight sequestration separately (which is essentially what happened). Others, including Obama, believed the best option was to reach a big fiscal accord, built up from the baseline of higher taxes on rich people, from which he’d agree to some entitlement cuts, Republicans would agree to close some tax loopholes, and the parties could put sequestration and budget brinksmanship behind them for years.

This is how a Democratic president ended up supporting a Social Security cut called Chained CPI, which reduces spending by indexing benefits to a less generous measure of inflation. One of the White House’s most poorly kept secrets is that many of Obama’s economic advisers support Chained CPI on the merits, or believe it to be the least-bad benefit cut Obama could offer Republicans. It’s how Chained CPI ended up in Obama’s budget last year as a partial sequestration replacement. And if the metaphysics of conservative tax policy hadn’t prohibited further budget wheeling and dealing between the White House and GOP, Republicans could’ve pocketed a big win.

But the metaphysics of conservative tax policy is a serious business. And now that the budget deal Obama wanted isn’t going to happen; that deficits have plummeted; that sequestration has been partially lifted; that Obama supports an immigration reform bill that would reduce deficits as much as Chained CPI; and that Democrats must once again invoke the referendum that resulted in Obama’s re-election; Obama’s dropping Chained CPI from his budget.

more
http://www.salon.com/2014/02/20/gops_social_security_disaster_how_conservatives_lost_their_chance_to_cut_benefits/
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GOP’s Social Security disaster: Conservatives just lost their chance to cut benefits (Original Post) DonViejo Feb 2014 OP
Now let's hope the GOP decides to attack Obama for pulling this JoePhilly Feb 2014 #1
They already have. SunSeeker Feb 2014 #2
Excellent, I hope they all start squawking. JoePhilly Feb 2014 #3
Indeed. nt SunSeeker Feb 2014 #4
There's more than one way to "give with the left hand/take back with the right hand..." blkmusclmachine Feb 2014 #5

JoePhilly

(27,787 posts)
1. Now let's hope the GOP decides to attack Obama for pulling this
Thu Feb 20, 2014, 05:21 PM
Feb 2014

from his budget.

That would be awesome!!!

"How dare the President not help us take granny's food money!!!"

SunSeeker

(51,574 posts)
2. They already have.
Thu Feb 20, 2014, 06:35 PM
Feb 2014

"This reaffirms what has become all too apparent: the president has no interest in doing anything, even modest, to address our looming debt crisis," Brendan Buck, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), said in an email.

http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/4824915/

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