If you weren’t sure before, there’s a clear sign something might be wrong with President Obama’s proposed budget: House Speaker John Boehner likes it.
Of course, President Obama never said he would leave Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security untouched, so it’s not a surprise he’s endorsing chained CPI or that he’s making overatures to Tea Partiers about trimming the deficit over the next 3 years. What is surprising is that the president seems to be giving up so much ground after winning re-election on refusing to sacrifice the Big 3 to deficit hawks. The Republicans were the ones who put up a big debt clock during the 2012 convention.
Even the latest poll shows 64% of Americans think job creation is more important than cutting the deficit. But today, the president emphasized deficit reduction and endorsed changes to Social Security that will trickle down to veterans benefits and food stamps. This stance is not what got the president re-elected, and it probably won’t win over the Republicans (who said “no” to the proposed budget even before the president announced it) anyway.
Yes, the Social Security reform known as chained CPI would help cut the deficit, but it might do it on the backs of the elderly, vets and working families. At its core, chained CPI is just a kinder, gentler cost -of-living adjustment and as the AARP points out, chained CPI would take less out of everyone’s Social Security payments over the long-term. Here’s the AARP’s hypothetical:









