Updated April 10:
The White House made it official on Wednesday — Obama became the first Democratic President to ever back Social Security cuts in a formal budget. There are some strong planks in the budget, but in this rant from Wednesday, I explain why those cuts should be a non-starter – and how FDR’s independent accounting for the program is being turned on its head.
As for the President’s perspective, Gene Sperling joined The Cycle live from the White House to make his case – and reiterate the hope that Republicans will embrace Obama’s deficit-slashing offer from December.
The White House unveils its official budget proposal on Wednesday, and the battle lines are already emerging. President Obama took several items of the GOP wish list and rolled them into his proposal, according to several reports. Budget guru Bob Greenstein explains:
In an attempt to reignite efforts to reach a bipartisan budget compromise, President Obama’s new budget will adhere to his final offer to House Speaker John Boehner of Dec. 17 in their budget talks. As a result, it will contain more savings in both Social Security and Medicare—both in the first ten years and beyond—than the House-passed Ryan budget.
The Obama budget contains major concessions. It will include $400 billion less in revenue and $200 billion more in discretionary program cuts than Obama’s original offer to Boehner earlier in December. It will also include the proposal to shift Social Security and various other cost-of-living adjustments to what’s known as the chained CPI, which was not part of Obama’s earlier offers to Boehner in December and which many Democrats strongly oppose.
Republicans have already balked, however. Some liberals are already worried that the budget battle will shape up as a sorry sequester sequel—where the goal posts keep moving inexorably to the right. How will Democrats push back?
Two responses are emerging. One is more descriptive than active—the insistence/branding/hope that Obama’s budget already represents a final compromise.









