Look for Cuts to Food Stamps and Medicaid First, Then Medicare
and Social Security
By Terry H. Schwadron
After the Republican Congress' tax cut bill, giving the wealthy a huge
break at the expense of middle-class and poorer Americans, Social Security,
Medicaid and Medicare apparently are next in target line.
As
predicted, recognizing that the tax cuts will blow a hole in the federal
deficit, Republicans will be targeting federal spending programs to pay for a
healthy share of the $1.5 trillion overspend that the corporate tax cuts will
cost over 10 years.
Social services make up the biggest share of entitlement
programs, so anything touching health, services to the most vulnerable in our
society or non-military will be huge targets, Republicans acknowledge.
From
a variety of news reports, it appears that the Trump administration and
Republicans in Congress led by Speaker Paul W. Ryan are looking to make the
most sweeping changes to federal safety net programs in a generation, using
legislation and executive actions to target recipients of food stamps, Medicaid
and housing benefits.
The
White House is said to be preparing a sweeping executive order that would
mandate a top-to-bottom review of these programs on which millions of poor
Americans rely. And Republicans congressional members crafting legislation that
could make it more difficult to qualify for those programs.
A
recent report in Politico, for example, said that federal health officials are encouraging states to
impose work requirements on able-bodied adults on Medicaid—a
major philosophical shift that would treat the program as welfare, rather than
health insurance.
The
Agriculture Department said last week that it would soon give states greater control over the food stamp
program, potentially opening the door to drug testing or
stricter work requirements on recipients of the $70 billion program long
targeted by fiscal conservatives.
The
Veterans Affairs Department announced it would redirect hundreds of millions of
dollars from a program for homeless veterans to local VA centers, but it
reversed course after fierce protests.
Of
course, maintaining these programs were another Donald Trump campaign promise,
but I doubt that you will be hearing much of that.
Conservatives
have long wanted to devolve control of social programs to the states and impose
stricter work and drug testing rules.
Republicans believe they have an
opportunity to overhaul those programs, which they have long argued are
wasteful, are too easily exploited and promote dependency.
Of
course, the recent election of Democrat Doug Jones to the Senate from Alabama
may make sure passage of any such legislation more difficult, since Republicans
now will have a mere two-vote majority.
Politico
reported that the president is expected to sign the welfare executive order as
soon as January, according to multiple administration officials, with an eye
toward making changes to health care, food stamps, housing and veterans
programs, not just traditional welfare payments.
Do
expect that there will be howls of protest particularly from groups
representing seniors, the health industry, poverty programs and the like. But
those folks are hardly donors to Republican senatorial reelection campaigns.
What
these moves are certain to accomplish is a further division in a continuing
fracture in the country, adding a kind of class warfare front to the current
divisions.
The
effort is supposed to be a major focus for a Republican retreat next month.
Speaker Ryan has written his “Better Way” plan to create a giant move of
entitlement programs to the states.
Of course, the states in turn, particularly
Republican-led states, do not want full financial responsibility for such
programs.
In recent days, Ryan said he hopes to embark on entitlement and
welfare reform next year.
He has said entitlement reform—an overhaul of
programs like Medicare and Medicaid that has been his priority since his days
as Budget chairman—is essential for tackling the debt, which is set to surge by
$1 trillion under the Republican tax reform bill, according to the Joint
Committee on Taxation.
Democrats,
who have been short on actual program proposals, will inherit a full campaign
agenda from these actions, of course.
“Paul
Ryan just admitted that after providing $1 trillion in tax breaks to the top 1%
and large corporations, Republicans will try to cut Social Security, Medicare,
Medicaid and help for the most vulnerable Americans,” Sen. Bernie Sanders
(I-Vt.) wrote on Twitter.
If
Republicans steer clear of Medicare, they say they will need to cut deeper into
programs like food stamps and Medicaid.
Despite Trump’s campaign vow on Medicaid, the GOP already placed the health insurance program for the poor on the chopping block earlier this year as part of its failed push to repeal Obamacare, proposing to siphon nearly $800 billion from the program over a decade.
Despite Trump’s campaign vow on Medicaid, the GOP already placed the health insurance program for the poor on the chopping block earlier this year as part of its failed push to repeal Obamacare, proposing to siphon nearly $800 billion from the program over a decade.
One
of the biggest programs that could be in the administration’s crosshairs is
food stamps, or the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, a program that
helps one in eight Americans buy groceries each month.
The Department of Agriculture has said it’s developing a policy that could make it easier for states to impose stricter work requirements or drug testing on recipients—things that states like Wisconsin and Florida have long tried to do, but have been blocked by either courts or USDA.
The Department of Agriculture has said it’s developing a policy that could make it easier for states to impose stricter work requirements or drug testing on recipients—things that states like Wisconsin and Florida have long tried to do, but have been blocked by either courts or USDA.
At
the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Secretary Ben Carson has made
clear his philosophy that welfare fosters dependency and has said the
government should be focused on the business of getting people out of public
housing.
Get
ready. You can already see this front coming.
Terry
H. Schwadron is a former editor for The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times
and The Providence Journal and is an active volunteer with immigrants and
writers and plays trombone in New York City. He blogs here.