At a White House event on Wednesday, Donald Trump not only described himself as having more successes than any president in American history at this point in his tenure, he added a new boast to his talking points:
“We’re saving Medicare. The Democrats want to destroy Medicare. If you look at what they’re doing, they’re going to destroy Medicare. And we will save it.”
Yesterday, Florida Gov. Rick Scott (R), a U.S. Senate candidate this year, echoed the sentiment, tweeting, “If you want to protect Medicare, vote Republican.”
Given Rick Scott’s past — he ran Columbia/HCA at a time when it was accused of widespread Medicare fraud, and the company was forced to pay $1.7 billion in restitution — this seems like a subject he should probably try to avoid. But even putting the Florida Republican’s scandalous past aside, why in the world would GOP leaders pretend to be the nation’s true champions of the socialized Medicare system?
For those who keep up on current events, it’s an awfully tough sell. For example, prominent Republican officials have already said they plan to pursue Medicare cuts in order to help offset the costs of the GOP’s tax breaks for the wealthy.
Complicating matters, as Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) was quick to remind Rick Scott last night, the latest House Republican budget proposed hundreds of billions of dollars in cuts to the Medicare system.
So what in the world are folks like Donald Trump and Rick Scott talking about?
They’re more than capable of speaking for themselves, but I think they want the public to believe that progressive “Medicare for All” proposals would necessarily undermine the existing Medicare program — which, in Republicans’ minds, means that conservatives can now lay claim to being the true supporters to the system GOP policymakers have fought so hard to cut.









