Taxing the rich is the best way to preserve Social Security and Medicare
JAMES ROOSEVELT JR., HENRY SCOTT WALLACE, JUNE HOPKINS, TOMLIN PERKINS COGGESHALL for Common Dreams
Let’s talk Social Security. The government shutdown was averted (temporarily), so that’s a good thing, right? Trump is promising not to touch it. Benefits are not threatened, right?
Wrong. Social Security has a bullseye on its back. As
descendants of the New Deal leaders who created it, we recognize the warning
signs, and need to shout the alarm.
The right-wing hard-liners who fired House Speaker Kevin
McCarthy—without a replacement in sight—are determined to balance the
budget by reducing spending. The word “revenues” is an obscenity to them. And
defense spending is sacred and untouchable.
But even if they completely eliminated every single
non-defense discretionary program—from food stamps to the FBI to border
protection—it wouldn’t be enough. It would add up to about $900 billion, or
about 15% of total
federal spending, which would fall far short of
balancing the budget. So their deficit-cutting zeal must inevitably turn to
what is called mandatory spending, most prominently the largest government
program of all, Social Security.
Republican presidential candidates are increasingly
emboldened to touch this deadly “third rail” of
American politics. Nikki Haley mocked other
candidates for promising not to touch Social Security. Ron
DeSantis wants to “revamp” it. Mike
Pence wants to privatize it, turning it over to
Wall Street and adding trillions to the national debt—to replace the New Deal with a
“better deal.”
And although former President Donald Trump now swears he would never harm a hair on Social Security’s head, his history renders such assurances hollow. He has previously suggested that a second Trump term would mean cuts to Social Security and Medicare.
Let’s not forget that his hugest unachieved social policy
goal at the end of his presidency was the complete termination of
Social Security’s principal funding source, the payroll tax.
Former Speaker McCarthy proposes a national commission to examine ways to cut Social Security. The 175 members of the House Republican Study Committee have released their proposed budget for fiscal 2024, which would cut benefits by one-third, essentially transforming Social Security from an earned insurance benefit into a subsistence-level welfare benefit.
Previous threats have included plans to sunset all mandatory
spending every five years (brainchild
of Senate GOP campaign chair Rick Scott), or even every single year (proposed
by Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson).
It’s true that Social Security will start having solvency
problems by 2034 (according to the Social Security
Administration), with retirees taking out more than current workers
are putting in. To this, there are obviously only two solutions—cutting payout
or increasing revenues. The Republicans in their budget acknowledge this, but
they absolutely reject any whiff of the latter (here at 87-88).
For a sustainable Social Security—the most popular government program in
America—taking revenues off the table is two things: 1) insanity, and 2)
unshakeable Republican orthodoxy.
As Oliver Wendell Holmes counselled, revenues—i.e.,
taxes—“are the price we pay for
civilized society.” And to fund our civilization, it’s obvious that
those with the most money should pay their fair share. Americans are shocked
that billionaires like Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk can get away with paying zero in
federal income taxes.
Let’s not forget that during FDR’s New Deal, which
rescued the nation from the Great Depression and grew the great American middle
class as never before, the tax rate on the richest Americans was 90%, up from 25% under previous Republican
administrations, which produced nothing but a do-nothing government, the Gilded
Age, and the Depression.
So let’s make the rich pay more of their fair share for Social Security. Let’s start with eliminating the cap on earnings that are subject to the payroll tax. Currently, earnings over $160,200 are totally exempt from payroll taxes.
That means that the CEO making $10 million stops
paying the 6.2% payroll tax after the first week of the year, while his janitor
pays 6.2% for the entire year. That’s an outrageous affront to ordinary working
people throughout America.
Democrats in Congress are brimming with proposals to guarantee Social Security’s solvency for generations, without cutting benefits one iota. Nearly 200 House Democrats recently introduced a bill called Social Security 2100: A Sacred Trust, which would extend solvency for more than 40 years, expand benefits for most recipients, and even cut taxes for 23 million beneficiaries.
It would fund this by imposing
the 6.2% payroll tax on earned income above $400,000 (honoring Biden’s promise
not to raise taxes on anyone with income under that level), and similarly
taxing investment income above that level.
Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) recently held a
hearing on a similar bill sponsored by him and Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.), called
Protecting Social Security for All: Making the Wealthy Pay Their Fair
Share, ensuring Social Security’s
solvency for 75 years.
Most expansively, there’s a bill by Sens. Warren and
Sanders and dozens of other Senate and House members, the Social Security
Expansion Act. It would not only extend solvency for more than a century, by setting the
threshold for payroll and investment tax at $250,000 of annual income (the
wealthiest 7% in America),
but would increase benefits for Social Security recipients by an average
of $2,400 a year and
help reduce the federal deficit by sending some of its investment-tax revenue
to the general treasury.
Yet all these simple and sustainable fixes are supported
only by Democrats. It makes one wonder: what fundamentally drives Republicans’
single-minded obsession with cutting Social Security? Is it hatred of the
program itself—the largest component
of federal expenditures, created by the greatest Democratic President ever,
amid Republican cries of “socialism”?
Or is it hatred of the notion of raising taxes on anybody, even the most obscenely rich? After all, Republican Presidents from Reagan to Trump have delighted in cutting taxes for the rich, on the thoroughly debunked theory that the money would somehow “trickle down” to ordinary Americans.
Trump and congressional Republicans have
promised more of the same if they regain power. In fact, they blatantly label
all taxes as pure theft (here, at p.20).
They literally laugh at
the notion of taxing the wealthiest Americans, even though voters of all
political stripes overwhelmingly support it.
Suffice to say that the two obsessions are conjoined.
More tax giveaways to the rich simply mean less revenue, higher deficits, and
more justification for taking a meat cleaver to programs that serve and protect
ordinary Americans.
Former Speaker McCarthy’s “commission” idea is just another prescription for slashing Social Security benefits, according to Sen. Ron Wyden, Chair of the Senate Committee responsible for Social Security.
McCarthy himself acknowledged
that all the “cutting,” including Social Security, would “make some people uncomfortable.”
Indeed, polls show overwhelming opposition to
his commission, and only 2% of Republicans support
cutting Social Security.
As Republican President Dwight Eisenhower warned, there may be
“a tiny splinter group” of politicians who want to mess with Social Security,
but “their number is negligible and they are stupid.”
Taxing the 1% to indefinitely assure modest financial
security for the 99% is blindingly logical and fair, and overwhelmingly
popular. Yet not a single congressional Republican—even ones in districts that
Biden won—is willing to support it.
FDR was called a “traitor to his class” when he forced
the “economic royalists” and the
“over-privileged” to pay their fair share for programs to help
ordinary people struggling to get by. He responded that he “welcomed their hatred,”
because he knew he was on the right side. Indeed, Social Security passed in
1935 with overwhelming bipartisan support, 372-33 in the House. We could use a
bit of that courage and bipartisanship today.
Fortunately, America’s most beloved and beleaguered government program is finally going to get a true champion—an actual Senate-confirmed leader. In the two years since President Biden fired the misbegotten Trump-holdover leadership, the agency has suffered a drastic decline in staffing, funding, and morale.
Facing daunting challenges
both from within and without, Biden’s newly announced nominee, former Maryland
Gov. Martin O’Malley, will
need every ounce of his legendary administrative acumen, as well as a backbone
of steel.
O’Malley should come out with guns blazing—demanding a
solid long-term legislative fix, and driving a stake through Republicans’
insistence that President Biden is responsible for the looming solvency crisis.
The $33 trillion national debt is a product of spending by both parties over many decades. The far right’s sudden burn-it-all-down obsession with deficit spending, after four years of happily running up record deficits under a Republican President, is a reckless and hypocritical abdication of the duty to govern and serve the ordinary people of this country.
It signals tough times ahead for Americans’ favorite government program. Our
ancestors who created Social Security 88 years ago would work their butts off
to protect and strengthen it.
JAMES ROOSEVELT JR.
is the grandson of President Franklin D.
Roosevelt and first lady Eleanor Roosevelt. He is also a former associate
commissioner at the Social Security Administration.
HENRY SCOTT WALLACE
is an attorney and foundation executive.
JUNE HOPKINS is a professor of History Emerita, Georgia Southern University, Armstrong Campus.
TOMLIN PERKINS COGGESHALL
is the grandson of Labor Secretary
Frances Perkins.