On the Senate floor Tuesday, Elizabeth Warren argued for the need to strengthen Social Security benefits, now that cuts to the program seem more likely.
“With tens of millions of people more financially stressed as they approach retirement, with more and more people left out of the private retirement security system, and with the economic security of our families unraveling, Social Security is rapidly becoming the only lifeline that millions of seniors have to keep their heads above water,” Warren said. “And yet, instead of taking on the retirement crisis, instead of strengthening Social Security, some in Washington are actually fighting to cut benefits.”
Warren rejected the proposals for adopting chained CPI as a way to measure inflation, which a number of politicians including President Obama have put forward in recent months. Chained CPI fails to keep up with rising costs for seniors, Warren argued, especially as savings and pensions are drying up: “It’s just a fancy way of saying ‘cut benefits.’”
The Massachusetts senator’s alternative is CPI-E, a different way to calculate cost-of-living adjustments for the elderly. CPI-E has become popular suggestion among Democrats, a number of whom Warren mentioned in her Senate speech: Sens. Harkin, Begich and Sanders.









