It’s well known by now that older Americans are more likely to turn out to vote in elections. It’s made them a crucial demographic to target for pandering over the years. And in the next few election cycles, the baby boomer generation is set to fill that niche — a shift that is currently poised to benefit the Republican Party.
That makes it particularly odd in my eyes that as members of their base age and find themselves unsure about who will care for them in their later years, Republicans in Congress are casting boomers to the side in their time of need in favor of making President Joe Biden look bad.
Republicans have spent recent weeks attacking Biden’s infrastructure plan for spending too much money on items that don’t fit their narrow “roads and bridges” definition of infrastructure. In response, last week Senate Republicans outlined their own infrastructure plan. The price tag for this pared down proposal was only $568 billion, less than a quarter of Biden’s $2.3 trillion plan.
Among the items on the chopping block is $400 billion in funding for in-home care for elder Americans and people with disabilities over the next eight years. It’s up to Congress to provide details, but Biden’s pitch claimed that the money will “help hundreds of thousands of Americans finally obtain the long-term services and support they need, while creating new jobs and offering caregiving workers a long-overdue raise, stronger benefits, and an opportunity to organize or join a union and collectively bargain.”
As things stand, the U.S. is facing a shortage of workers to care for a quickly aging population — and those workers currently in the field are severely underpaid for their efforts.
“Caregivers, including nursing assistants and home health and personal care aides, earn $12 an hour, on average,” NPR reported on April 9, adding that most of them are women of color and one-third of caregivers who work for agencies don’t get health insurance from their jobs.
Most of those aides are employed through agencies that get reimbursed through Medicaid for the hours they work at their clients’ homes — but those services vary widely between states, which set Medicaid enrollment rates.
According to The New York Times, “Agencies consistently report labor shortages, which is perhaps unsurprising given the low pay. Raising wages may be essential to meet the booming demand. The Labor Department estimates that these occupations will require 1.6 million additional workers over 10 years.”
Even those older Americans who are eligible for Medicare aren’t covered for most long-term care. Instead, it only provides home-based care for people who are literally unable to leave their homes, and even then, it doesn’t pay for 24-hour care or even personal aides like those reimbursed under Medicaid.
It’s clearly a problem that needs a solution, and yet it’s been a constant punching bag for Republicans. Elder care was even one of the line items in a much-maligned tweet thread from Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., listing all of the items that didn’t count as “infrastructure” in the senator’s eyes.
President Biden’s proposal is about anything but infrastructure. pic.twitter.com/fRtbPqg7QK









