Politicians are wont to repeat, often excessively, a policy meme or
buzzword in hopes it catches on and becomes part of the public’s lexicon
as an identifying trait of a political party or particular candidate’s
agenda. Whether it is to demonstrate consistency of intent, or just to
drive a point home, offering the same policy recommendations as a be
all, end all, fix for anything is why America is stuck in an austerity
trance with little to no hope of recovering anytime soon. President
Obama is a masterful tactician when it comes to reiterating propositions
he knows repugicans will reject out of hand, and with news of his
symbolic budget proposals due out next week, he is repeating the same
plan he offered repugicans in the past and as sure as the Sun rises in
the East, Speaker John Boehner rejected them immediately revealing he
certainly did not have time to read them in their entirety.In the President’s last plan to avert the fiscal cliff, he called for
major health care cuts by reducing payments to drug companies and
hospitals, recommended changing COLA measures tied to inflation which
raises taxes and slowly cuts Social Security benefits for some
recipients, replaced repugicans’ sequestration cuts, and proposed
additional spending focusing on infrastructure improvements. His new
budget proposal, which is strictly symbolic, is a nearly identical
reiteration of his last offering with some incorporation of his policies
in his State of the Union address. Liberals are rightly upset over the
shift to chained-CPI for Social Security cost of living adjustments, but
they were equally incensed when he offered them during fiscal cliff
negotiations and their tantrums were wasted because as expected, repugicans rejected his entire plan.
The repugicans have reiterated their own rejection of the President’s
plans because they include new revenue, spending on infrastructure to
create jobs, and do not eliminate the New Deal programs they have lusted
to demolish for 75 years. Critics of the President’s budget claimed
that including cuts to Social Security would give repugicans a talking
point that even Obama sees the necessity to reduce the deficit by
slashing “entitlements,” and they have a point because Boehner said “it included only modest entitlement savings,” and that “if
the president believes these modest entitlement savings are needed to
help shore up these programs, there’s no reason they should be held
hostage for more tax hikes.” Boehner is not interested in shoring up
Social Security or he would be first in line to lift the cap on
earnings and put the Trust on track to solvency for several generations. The repugicans plainly want the program eliminated to create a permanent
underclass of elderly Americans dependent on Wall Street for their
retirement or die, and to seize the trillions in the Trust’s coffers to
hand out as tax cuts for the rich.
There were other aspects of the President’s budget proposal that
drove Boehner to reject it without reading it besides new revenue that
are reiterations of repugican policies over the past four years. The repugicans hate the notion of spending to create jobs through
infrastructure improvements, spending on education, and replacing their
sequestration cuts with more measured reductions in other areas. the repugicans worked too hard to get the sequester cuts that for nine
years and nine months will slash education spending, kill jobs, decimate
anti-poverty programs, and hurt the economy to settle for any
replacement short of imposing an enhanced version of Paul Ryan’s Path to
Prosperity budget that piles on debt due to massive tax cuts for the
rich. They also have stated in no uncertain terms that infrastructure
repairs are off the table to maintain America’s pathetic standing as one
of the poorest infrastructures in the developed and developing world,
and the idea of putting Americans to work goes against everything repugicans have stood for over the past four years.
The President knows offering a carrot to repugicans in the hopes of a
so-called grand bargain is an exercise in futility, but with the
American people watching, he is shining a spotlight on repugican
intransigence and allegiance to the rich. By offering an olive branch in
the form of chained-CPI for Social Security, repugicans can no longer
say the President is afraid of his base, or unwilling to meet repugicans half way to solve the nation’s phony deficit crisis, and
their immediate rejection to compromise further portrays them as the
real problem in Washington. Social Security and Medicare are extremely
popular programs, and repugican insistence that they be eviscerated to
give more tax cuts to corporations and the rich far exceed the
President’s offer to change the COLA methodology. It is also worth
noting, again, that the Center for America Progress, no wingnut
belief tank, recommend chained-CPI as a revenue raising long term fix
for Social Security, but with repugicans bound and determined to reject
any proposal that fails to end Social Security and Medicare in their
entirety, and rejection of any new revenue to create jobs and repair the
decrepit infrastructure, or replace the job-killing sequestration cuts,
it is doubtful there will be a grand bargain, or any bargain, between
the President and repugicans. Besides, the President’s budget proposal
is only symbolic because in America, Congress makes the budget and as
long as repugicans run this country, any budget that does not kill
jobs, kill safety nets, and end public education, is doomed to fail
regardless who proposes it.
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