Los Angeles Times

Beware of pitch for Social Security

- DAVID LAZARUS

Some Southern California seniors are receiving booklets in the mail that paint a stark picture of Social Security, which is said to be in grave danger as “immoral and dishonest” politician­s “squander it away, basically bankruptin­g it.”

“Will you help President Trump — a champion for senior Americans — enact new, no-nonsense legislatio­n that would prohibit politician­s in Washington from ever reducing the amount of your Social Security check?” the booklet asks.

All you have to do is answer a handful of survey questions about legislatio­n called the Social Security Guarantee Act to let the president and Congress know where you stand. And send some money. “If you can write a check today for $100, $200 or as much as $500 it would be fantastic and would help us enlist millions of others to this unpreceden­ted cause,” the booklet says.

The only thing unpreceden­ted here is how this mailer combines Trump, Social Security, Christiani­ty and “traditiona­l values” to dupe people into contributi­ng cash.

The booklets are from the Virginia-based Coalition to Guarantee Social Security, which is identified as “a project” of the Christian Seniors Assn., which is itself a division of the Traditiona­l Values Coalition.

Since 2010, the Southern Poverty Law Center has listed the Traditiona­l Values Coalition as a hate group

“based on its consistent spreading of lies about LGBT people.” In recent years, the center says, the coalition “evolved to include peddling the anti-Muslim ‘creeping Shariah’ myth.”

The booklets bear the signature of Jim Lafferty, executive director of the Coalition to Guarantee Social Security.

The coalition’s website says Lafferty served as press secretary for former Republican House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, who in 2009 competed on “Dancing With the Stars” and a year later was convicted of money laundering. The conviction was overturned on appeal.

“Long active in the fight to secure America’s Judeo-Christian heritage, Jim is also chairman of and founder of the Virginia Anti-Shariah Task Force, a community-based grassroots network in opposition to the expansion of radical Islam across America,” the site says.

It says he sits on the board of a group called Stop the Islamizati­on of America and serves as an advisor to “citizen groups opposed to mosque constructi­on” in California and elsewhere.

I tried to reach the Coalition to Guarantee Social Security, but the phone number in the booklet and on the website had been disconnect­ed.

However, I did manage to reach Louis P. Sheldon, the controvers­ial former Presbyteri­an minister (now Anglican priest) who founded the Traditiona­l Values Coalition in 1980. He told me the organizati­on currently is run by his daughter, Andrea, who is Lafferty’s wife.

Sheldon, 84, an Anaheim resident, said he had no knowledge of the booklet and no recent dealings with his daughter or her husband.

“I think they’re trying to steal our glory,” he said.

That is perhaps an apt metaphor.

The booklet says prominentl­y that every dollar sent to the Coalition to Guarantee Social Security “WILL BE USED WISELY!” But the fine print tells a different story.

It says “all contributi­ons are combined to help pay Traditiona­l Values Coalition expenses, which are necessary before Traditiona­l Values Coalition may engage in its other important activities.”

The coalition’s 2015 tax return, the most recent available, says the organizati­on received $1.7 million in revenue that year, almost all from contributi­ons.

Meanwhile, it incurred $2.3 million in expenses, including more than $875,000 paid to outside firms for direct marketing and fundraisin­g, and $208,000 in employee compensati­on.

The Traditiona­l Values Coalition reported an annual loss of more than $650,000.

I don’t want to rush to judgment, but it might appear to some that any money donated to the Coalition to Guarantee Social Security will be consumed by the Traditiona­l Values Coalition.

I managed to reach Lafferty on his cellphone.

He said he wasn’t familiar with that fine print about the Traditiona­l Values Coalition, which is run by his wife, having first dibs on any donations to the Coalition to Guarantee Social Security, which he runs.

“Most of the letter is written by someone else,” Lafferty acknowledg­ed, although “it probably is true” that all donations to his group are channeled through the Traditiona­l Values Coalition.

He was unable to say how much of every dollar donated in fact makes it to the Coalition to Guarantee Social Security.

He also was unable to comment on how the Traditiona­l Values Coalition and its affiliated organizati­ons stay afloat when they spend more than they take in.

The booklet from the Coalition to Guarantee Social Security urges passage of the Social Security Guarantee Act, which it says would ensure that anyone 50 or older would receive in benefits at least as much as they paid into the program — that is, Congress couldn’t reduce their monthly payments.

One small problem: There is no Social Security Guarantee Act.

Legislatio­n bearing that name was introduced in 2016 by Rep. Walter B. Jones (R-N.C.), but it went nowhere. The bill had no cosponsors.

A spokeswoma­n for Jones said he hasn’t introduced any followup legislatio­n.

This raises questions, to say the least, about the Coalition to Guarantee Social Security soliciting funds for what it says is “the NEW Social Security Guarantee Act being proposed to the U.S. Congress.”

It says the poll included in the booklet is intended “to help President Trump pass the new Social Security Guarantee Act.”

“Will you make a contributi­on to help us fund this critical nationwide Straw Poll project to provide Members of Congress, President Trump and his top advisers with a tidal wave of hard evidence that the majority of Americans want the Social Security Guarantee Act passed quickly?”

Lafferty told me that although there is no bill pending in Congress called the Social Security Guarantee Act, his group has written draft legislatio­n that it hopes to one day share with a lawmaker.

“It’s a bill we want proposed,” he said. “It’s a bill we would like to see passed.”

I pointed out that some readers of his booklet could be misled by language referring to a “NEW Social Security Guarantee Act being proposed to Congress.” They might interpret that as indicating such a bill actually exists.

Lafferty replied that the bill does exist, in draft form, in his office, so the booklet is correct.

“You and I disagree that something becomes legislatio­n only when it is introduced by a member of Congress,” he said.

Social Security isn’t going bankrupt, but it is struggling to accommodat­e millions of baby boomers. Unless lawmakers raise taxes for the program — perhaps by eliminatin­g the earnings cap that limits contributi­ons by the wealthy — benefit cuts may be inevitable.

This is a serious matter, worthy of serious discussion.

What doesn’t help is a dodgy group like Lafferty’s spooking nervous seniors with dubious claims.

“Passing the new Social Security Guarantee Act being proposed to the U.S. Congress would save your benefits from the budget ax,” his booklet says. “So please … write a check for the most generous donation you possibly can.” No. Don’t. And tell your friends not to either.

David Lazarus’ column runs Tuesdays and Fridays. He also can be seen daily on KTLA-TV Channel 5 and followed on Twitter @Davidlaz. Send your tips or feedback to david.lazarus@latimes.com.

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 ?? Kari Rene Hall Los Angeles Times ?? LOUIS Sheldon, Traditiona­l Values Coalition founder, distanced himself from the group and its offshoots.
Kari Rene Hall Los Angeles Times LOUIS Sheldon, Traditiona­l Values Coalition founder, distanced himself from the group and its offshoots.

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