With just over four weeks left for Congress to strike a deal to avert the fiscal cliff, the tug-of-war between spending cuts and revenue increases is accelerating. While some Republicans have signaled flexibility on revenue and some Democrats have indicated a broad willingness to look for savings in entitlement programs, most Democrats agree: Social Security is off the table.
When Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Tuesday that Social Security was not going to be negotiable in the budget talks, he had a number of Democrats behind him.
Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) called social security “an absolute nonstarter” this week. “Social Security has not contributed to the debt and the deficits,” she added.
It’s an opinion shared by Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL). Durbin said that “Social Security doesn’t add one penny to the deficit” and “we should treat it as a separate challenge,” during a Morning Joe appearance Tuesday. And Congressman Elijah Cummings said Social Security “should be set on the side” in a Tuesday interview on Andrea Mitchell Reports.
Meanwhile, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont has formed the Defend Social Security Caucus with more than a dozen other Democratic senators, not only to guard against cuts advocated by House Budget Committee Chair Paul Ryan, but also against changes recommended by President Obama’s Simpson-Bowles deficit reduction commission, including increasing the retirement age for full benefits from 67 to 69.









