Call & Times

GOP budget frays nation’s safety net

- Herb Weiss, LRI’12, is a Pawtucket writer covering aging, healthcare and medical issues. To purchase Taking Charge: Collected Stories on Aging Boldly, a collection of 79 of his weekly commentari­es, go to herbweiss.com.

Just six months ago, the Republican-controlled House passed their massive $1.5 trillion tax cuts for the nation’s largest corporatio­ns and to the wealthiest 1 percent. The day of reckoning has now come as the GOP spells out how it will rein in the nation’s spiraling deficit through its recently released FY 2019 budget resolution. On Tuesday, the House Budget Committee unveiled its 85page budget resolution, making trillions in spending cuts to Medicare and Medicaid, he nation’s two largest entitlemen­t programs, health care, and programs benefiting veterans, students and working families. The budget titled, “A Brighter American Future,” calls for $8.1 trillion of deficit reduction while including reconcilia­tion instructio­ns for 11 House authorizin­g committees to enact at least $302 billion over nine years. Consistent with levels signed into law in February 2018, this budget sets top-line discretion­ary spending at $1.24 trillion ($647 billion for defense spending and $597 billion for non-defense discretion­ary spending). The budget blueprint cleared the House Budget Committee by a partisan vote of 21-13, with a vote, with a Democratic and Republican lawmaker absent from the vote. Political insiders Fortunatel­y, Capitol Hill-watchers say the 2019 House GOP Budget proposal is unlikely to make it before the full House or pass this year. But, it sends a message out to voters about the Republican’s legislativ­e priorities to rein in a skyrocketi­ng deficit and debt by slashing entitlemen­t and popular domestic programs.

Putting the Wealthy and Powerful Ahead

When unveiling the House GOP’s budget, Chairman Steve Womack of Arkansas, notes that it addresses “unsustaina­ble mandatory spending, continues economic growth, encourages better government and greater accountabi­lity, and empowers state and local government­s.” During a CNBC interview on June 22, Womack said, “We have done our job and it is a reflection of what we believe is the stark reality of the fiscal condition of our country right, unstable deficits year over year and $21 trillion in debt that is going to continue to grow over time. We just felt like it was time to sound the alarm and do something about and this and this particular budget resolution does it.” Democratic Policy and Communicat­ions Committee Co-Chair David N. Cicilline counters Womack’s rosy assessment of the House GOP budget. “If a budget is a statement of your values, then this budget shows Republican­s are putting the wealthy and powerful ahead of working people. Just a few months after passing a massive tax cut for billionair­es and corporate special interests, Republican­s are proposing to repeal the Affordable Care Act; cut funding for road repairs and other infrastruc­ture projects; cripple Medicare and Social Security; make deep cuts to Pell grants; and repeal Dodd-Frank so the big banks can do whatever they want once again. In fact, this budget is so terrible, it’s hard to imagine Republican­s will ever bring it to the floor,” the Rhode Island lawmaker said. “But despite an extraordin­ary past and a booming economy thanks to tax reform, there are real fiscal challenges casting a shadow of doubt on the nation’s future, including $21 trillion of debt that is rapidly on the rise. We must overcome the challenges.” Womack says that his budget plan “offers a balanced and responsibl­e plan to not only address the challenges but give rise to the nation’s prosperity.”

Medicare and Medicaid on Budgetary Chopping Block

Numerous federal programs affecting old Americans would be put on the budgetary chopping block, which includes another call for full repeal of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), leaving 23 million Americans without health coverage. A total of $5.4 trillion of cuts would come from mandatory or automatic spending programs such as Medicare and Medicaid. The plan calls for raising the Medicare eligibilit­y age to 67, as well as combining Medicare Parts A and B, and allowing for privatizat­ion of the entitlemen­t program. The projected cuts for Medicare alone add up to $537 billion. The GOP’s efforts to privatize Medicare runs counter to what Americans want, preserving the program in its current form. The Kaiser Family Foundation released poll results in 2015, celebratin­g Medicare’s 50th Anniversar­y, the respondent­s by a margin of more than two to one, do not want to see their traditiona­l Medicare privatized. As to Medicaid, a joint federal and state program that helps with medical costs for some people with limited income and resources, the GOP budget plan limits per capita payments and allows states to turn it into a block grant. It also introduces stricter work requiremen­ts for beneficiar­ies and shifting to a capped system linked to medical inflation rates, these changes cutting about $1.5 trillion. Additional­ly, Womack’s budget would no longer allow people on Social Security disability to receive unemployme­nt insurance at the same time, slashing $4 billion for the FY 2019 budget. Outside of mandatory spending programs, the budget would cut trillions from “welfare,” federal retirement programs and veterans programs, while overhaulin­g rules for medical liability lawsuits. “This budget proposal is a direct attack on the quality of life of America’s seniors,” said Robert Roach, Jr., president of the Alliance of Retired Americans. “We must hold our elected officials accountabl­e for their actions. We predicted cuts to our hard-earned benefits after the GOP passed their unfunded tax cuts for billionair­es and corporatio­ns. Unfortunat­ely, that reality is now staring us in the face,” he says. Adds Max Richtman, president and CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, “Speaker Ryan is obviously making good on his promise to come after safety net programs to pay for the reckless Trump/GOP tax reform. In so doing, he and his party are sending a clear message: older, poorer and disabled Americans are not as important as the billionair­es and big corporatio­ns who are the main beneficiar­ies of a tax scheme that is blowing up our nation’s debt.” Before the House Budget Committee vote, Joyce A. Rogers, AARP’s senior vice president of government affairs, urged that Medicare not be cut. She called for good changes such as “reducing prescripti­on drugs costs, enhancing payment and delivery reforms, and addressing the widespread fraud, waste, and abuse in the program.” According to Rogers, “The typical senior, with an annual income of approximat­ely $26,000 and already spending one out of every six dollars on health care, counts on Social Security for the majority of their income, and on Medicare for access to affordable health coverage.” Finally, Rogers notes that the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) plays vital role in providing nutritiona­l assistance to millions of eligible, low-income individual­s and families, many seniors. “In 2016, 8.7 million (over 40 percent of) SNAP households had at least one adult age 50 or older. Proposals to block grant the program, or expand work requiremen­ts, will make SNAP less responsive and accessible in times of need,” she says.

Educate Yourself About the Issues

With the upcoming Rhode Island primary on Sept. 12, and midterm elections just 135 days away, AARP Rhode Island State Director Kathleen Connell urges all registered Rhode Island voters to review candidates’ positions on the issues and go to the polls and cast your ballot. “The 2018 midterms will be among the most historic elections in a generation,” she said. Nationwide, the balance of power in both houses of Congress, as well as in many state legislatur­es and governorsh­ips, could shift because of the results in the fall’s general elections, says Connell. While the most common way to vote is for registered voters to go to their local polling place on election day, Connell said that many family caregivers and others who may have difficulty voting on that day may be eager to take advantage of other methods of casting a ballot. “With all that unpaid family caregivers have on their plates each day, it can often be hard for them to get to the polls on election day,” said Connell. “If a caregivers’ loved one is voting, it can be even harder, especially if their loved one has mobility issues. When available, alternativ­e methods of casting a ballot (a mail ballot) are essential to allowing our state’s family caregivers and others to participat­e in this important election.” To learn more about mail ballots, visit https://vote.sos.ri.gov/ To mobilize it’s 35 million members, AARP has launched “Be the Difference. Vote,” a campaign designed to maximize the political influence of over age 50 voters. The initiative seeks to get the largest possible turnout of older voters to the polls during the ongoing primaries and in the November general election. It will also put front and center issues like Medicare security and family caregiving, along with other topics of particular interest to older voters. To learn more about “Be the Difference Vote,” check out aarp.org/vote to see how to get involved and stay informed.

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HERB WEISS Senior Beat

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