Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ignorance on display

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It seems the hecklers at last week’s State of the Union speech owe President Joe Biden an apology. After some congressio­nal Republican­s tried to shout him down for saying some in the GOP want to cut Social Security and Medicare, Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) stepped up to add his voice to the chorus alleging that Biden was lying—then promptly reiterated his call for a universal “sunset” on all federal programs every five years, which would apply to Social Security and Medicare.

Oops.

And it’s not just Scott. Few other Republican­s say it so bluntly, but the whole point of the current debt ceiling fight in the House is to force meaningful cuts in government spending, which cannot mathematic­ally happen if Social Security or Medicare (or the equally untouchabl­e defense budget) aren’t on the table.

Biden, in his speech, triggered Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and other extremists by alleging that “some Republican­s want Medicare and Social Security to sunset.”

“It is being proposed by individual­s,” Biden added, as Greene and others heckled like bleacher bums at a ballgame. “I’m politely not naming them, but it’s being proposed by some of you.”

Scott’s plan, first proposed last year, would “sunset” (his word, before Biden borrowed it) all federal legislatio­n every five years. “If a law is worth keeping,” Scott reiterated last week, “Congress can pass it again.”

None of this is to say there doesn’t have to be discussion about how to keep these two programs solvent in the decades to come. But the fact that the Republican approach always seems to come down to cutting benefits, rather than making the wealthy pay their fair share, is fair game for Biden and Democrats—no matter how much heckling the Marjorie Taylor Greenes of the world do.

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