Porterville Recorder

Speaker Ryan will leave his mark on country

- By ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Paul Ryan will leave Congress having achieved one of his career goals: rewriting the tax code. On his other defining aim — balancing the budget and cutting back benefit programs like Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid — Ryan has utterly failed.

Ryan, a budget geek with a passion for details who announced Wednesday that he would retire next year, proved adroit in drawing up budget plans that balanced on paper but didn’t get beyond the hypothetic­al. Under his leadership, Republican­s never tried to implement the deep cuts his budget called for, particular­ly his vision of turning Medicare into a voucher-like program for future retirees. Instead, the House passed steep tax cuts while increasing spending, setting the government on a path to rising deficits.

The gap between Ryan’s reach and his grasp was especially stark this week. The Congressio­nal Budget Office said Monday that the tax bill and last month’s $1.3 trillion spending bill would add more than $2.6 trillion to the national debt over the coming decade — and the looming return of the first trillion-dollar deficits since President Barack Obama’s first term.

The rising deficits don’t lay at Ryan’s feet alone. Although the 48-year-old lawmaker from Wisconsin was an aggressive salesman for his plans, and was once viewed as the new face of a GOP focused on shrinking the size of government, the party ultimately did not turn his way. President Donald Trump had no interest in Ryan’s Medicare proposal and even called it a political loser

during the 2016 primary campaign. Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., has made clear he’s not interested in taking on Social Security reforms.

“I feel from all the budgets that I’ve passed, normalizin­g entitlemen­t reform, pushing the cause of entitlemen­t reform and the House passing entitlemen­t reform, I’m very proud of that fact,” Ryan said Wednesday.

Still, this was not likely how a young Ryan, who cut his teeth in Washington as a speechwrit­er for conservati­ve

icon Jack Kemp, imagined closing out his career.

Earlier in his career, Ryan was an advocate for partially privatizin­g Social Security by allowing younger retirees to steer a portion of their payroll taxes into retirement accounts. That idea cratered in 2005 despite a determined push by President

George W. Bush.

“Collective­ly, Congress is always fearful of taking on tough issues, and there’s no budget issue tougher than Medicare and Social Security,” said former Sen. John Sununu, RN.H., who co-sponsored Ryan’s 2005 Social Security bill. “It’s been true for three decades or more.”

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