Albuquerque Journal

Safety-net cuts likely to divide Congress

Senate reluctant to back welfare, Medicare reforms desired by House GOP

- BY ANNA EDGERTON AND LAURA LITVAN

WASHINGTON — Profound difference­s between House and Senate Republican­s may play as big a role as GOP fights with Democrats on how the legislativ­e agenda plays out when Congress returns in January.

House Republican­s, especially conservati­ve members, have been energized by their ability to rally around the tax overhaul and to limit demands from Democrats — and from the Senate — on the stopgap spending measure that closed out the year and will keep the federal government running through Jan. 19.

With the tax plan now law, House Speaker Paul Ryan has set his sights on another longheld Republican goal: reforming safety-net standbys such as Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, popularly known as welfare and food stamps, and used by millions of poor, disabled and elderly Americans. Ryan also spoke, on Dec. 6., of overhaulin­g Medicare, calling it the “biggest entitlemen­t.”

But then there’s the Senate, where Republican­s will have the slimmest possible margin in 2018 and the chamber’s rules give minority Democrats significan­t leverage to bottle up proceeding­s. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, recognizin­g that reality, shot down the idea of attempting to jam through Republican-only legislatio­n.

“There’s not much you can do on a partisan basis in the Senate with 52-48 or at 51-49, which would be the number of us for next year,” McConnell said at a news conference on Dec. 22. “I don’t think most of our Democratic colleagues want to do nothing, and there are areas where I think we can get bipartisan agreement.”

McConnell says his agenda for early 2018 will be dominated by a drive to forge a broad agreement on agency spending for the rest of the fiscal year; a bipartisan measure loosening Dodd-Frank banking rules for smaller institutio­ns; and an immigratio­n overhaul if negotiatio­ns between Republican­s and Democrats can reach an agreement.

He’s all but rejected the idea of another attempt to repeal Obamacare or taking on reform of welfare programs or so-called entitlemen­t programs like Medicare. McConnell said such attempts can only be successful when both parties agree on the terms.

“The only way I would be willing to go to entitlemen­t reform — I assume that’s a euphemism for things like Social Security and Medicare — would be if there were Democratic support,” McConnell told the Wall Street Journal.

Ryan, on the other hand, and many of his House Republican­s, see overhaulin­g social programs as the essential next step after their rewrite of the U.S. tax code, which is forecast to drain some $1.5 trillion from federal tax revenues over the next decade. Ryan contends that reforming entitlemen­t programs and increasing economic growth by lowering taxes are both necessary to pay off the federal debt.

“We will get back at reforming these entitlemen­ts,” Ryan told Fox News’s Martha MacCallum last week. “We’re going to take on welfare reform, which is another big entitlemen­t program, where we’re basically paying people — able-bodied people — not to work.”

As a candidate, Trump promised repeatedly that he wouldn’t cut Medicare, the provides health insurance for older Americans, or Social Security. Other safetynet programs may be fair game, though. The president said in November that “we’re looking very strongly at welfare reform, and that’ll all take place right after taxes.” And Ryan has said that Republican­s are making an impression on Trump when it comes to Medicare reform.

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