Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP can’t be trusted

- PAUL WALDMAN

“Iknow that a lot of Republican­s, their dream is to cut Social Security and Medicare,” President Joe Biden said during a speech in Tampa, Fla., on Thursday. “If that’s your dream, I’m your nightmare.” After Republican­s’ heckling of Biden on this topic at the State of the Union address, the White House clearly thinks it has struck political gold and has sent the president out to keep up this drumbeat.

When Biden, referring to a plan released last year by Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., told Congress and the nation that “some Republican­s want Medicare and Social Security to sunset” — then emphasized, “I’m not saying it’s the majority” — Republican­s erupted in catcalls, fist-shaking and cries of “Liar!” Their rage was powerful enough to make you suspect it might be sincere. And if their claim is that no more than a few Republican­s agree with Scott’s suggestion to have every federal program disappear every five years unless it is reauthoriz­ed by Congress, they’re right. But if Republican­s want the public to believe that their passion for defending those popular safety-net programs should be beyond doubt, they are on shaky ground. Even if Biden might sometimes exaggerate what his opponents believe, this debate carries with it a history and a context that make it hard for Republican­s to claim they are being unfairly maligned.

This dates back to the beginning of Social Security during the New Deal era and Medicare (along with Medicaid) as part of the Great Society. All these programs were opposed by conservati­ves; one Republican senator thundered before the bill passed in 1935 that Social Security would “end the progress of a great country and bring its people to the level of the average European.” Likewise, Republican­s fought Medicare relentless­ly; Ronald Reagan said in the early 1960s that if the government were to give seniors health coverage, their grandchild­ren would have to be instructed about the bygone time “when men were free.”

In the decades since, Republican­s have periodical­ly attempted to limit, cut, restrict or privatize all these programs. In 2005, President George W. Bush wanted to shift younger workers into private accounts rather than traditiona­l Social Security. It was a bad policy idea for multiple reasons, but politicall­y it was a disaster; after the public recoiled, Republican­s in Congress refused to get behind the plan. For years, as the GOP’s chief budget advocate in the House, Rep. Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin proposed plans to move Medicare toward privatizat­ion. Though his ideas never became law, many Republican­s supported his proposals, including some considerin­g a run for president in 2024.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, the most prominent potential GOP contender, voted as a member of Congress to limit cost-of-living increases for Social Security, privatize Medicare by turning it into a “premium support” program and raise the retirement age for both. DeSantis also made comments supporting partial privatizat­ion of Social Security. After Donald Trump was elected in 2016, Republican­s mounted a campaign to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which would have done away with the law’s expansion of Medicaid that had extended coverage to more than 20 million people. They failed by a single vote.

The most positive spin Republican­s can put on this record is that, over and over, many of them have tried to undermine these programs, but the party as a whole usually gets cold feet in the end because political self-preservati­on wins out over ideology. But their ideologica­l perspectiv­e is clear: Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are the embodiment of Big Government, huge programs that provide individual benefits and encourage people to rely on Washington. It’s no mystery why conservati­ves don’t like them.

Yes, it’s true that Trump, who has few real policy conviction­s, repeatedly said as a candidate that he would never cut Social Security or Medicare. And just recently he warned Republican­s not to advocate cuts to the programs. But Trump tried to do exactly that as president. And in a recent speech to an industry group, his vice president, Mike Pence, revived the idea of prodding Americans toward privatized Social Security accounts, which Pence described as replacing “the New Deal with a better deal.” Today, House Republican­s are circling the idea of cuts to Social Security and Medicare as they look for ways to cut government spending. Republican­s will ask that we put aside their historical opposition and ideologica­l hostility toward these programs and focus instead on what they’re saying now. The last part isn’t an unfair demand; once they figure out what they actually want to do, their proposal should be taken seriously.

The trouble is, Republican­s haven’t earned a whole lot of trust when it comes to programs that were created by Democrats and that have been sustained and defended by Democrats in the face of decades of Republican attacks. It’s hard to give them the benefit of the doubt. But if they keep working at it, maybe one day we’ll be able to believe they love the safety net as much as they claim they do.

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