Flashback: During early October 1990, the Senate
debated a controversial proposal offered by New York Democratic
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan to end the federal government's
pernicious practice of using surplus Social Security funds to
underwrite other governmental activity. Moynihan wanted to reduce
the Social Security payroll tax by an amount sufficient to return
surplus Social Security funds to workers.
Not surprisingly, Moynihan's proposal split his party. Several
senior Senate Democrats, including Majority Leader George Mitchell
(Maine), Appropriations Chairman Robert Byrd (W.Va.) and Finance
Chairman Lloyd Bentsen (Tex.), thought the proposal threatened the
future of Social Security and vigorously opposed it. Most
rank-and-file Democrats, however, backed Moynihan.
Today: A very similar proposal has surfaced and created
considerable buzz. Put forward by Sen. Jim DeMint (R.-S.C.), the
Stop the Raid on Social Security Act (S 1302) would maintain the
payroll tax at its current level, but channel surplus
funds-estimated to exceed $80 billion next year-into retirement
accounts that workers would own. Echoing Moynihan, DeMint decries
spending the surplus on other government programs, saying it
transforms Social Security into a "secret slush fund" that breaks
the government's trust with workers.
Democrat Reform
Moynihan lost on a procedural motion, but he nevertheless won the
support of 54 senators, including 42 Democrats. Among those voting
to bring the proposal to an up-or-down vote were several current
party leaders, including Sen. John Kerry (Mass.), ranking Senate
Finance Committee Democrat Max Baucus (Mont.), ranking Senate
Budget Committee Democrat Kent Conrad (N.D.) and moderate Sen. Joe
Lieberman (Conn.).
They were joined by a junior senator from Nevada who spoke
glowingly of the Moynihan plan: Harry Reid. Yes, the same Harry
Reid, now Senate minority leader, who last month denounced the
DeMint plan and its House counterpart as "nothing more than
political gimmicks" that "would make matters worse."
This despite the fact that Moynihan's proposal was more generous.
Under Moynihan, not only would workers receive back their portion
of surplus Social Security taxes, they would be allowed to use them
any way they desired. The DeMint plan, by contrast, would severely
limit the use of the surplus, requiring workers to invest them in
personal accounts comprised solely of government-issued
securities.
Harry Reid's Flip-Flop
Reid's 1990 arguments on behalf of returning the Social Security
surplus to workers are significant, given his current stature. Here
is what he said:
"I practiced law before coming to the Senate. Like most attorneys
who have an office practice where they deal with clients who have
problems, I had a trust fund set up for my clients. If there were
ever a time where money came into my office that was my clients'
money, that money had to go into a trust fund.
"We had to make sure that money went to the client. That money
could not be used to make car payments for me, house payments for
me, or buy a present for one of my children. That money could only
be used for the purpose for which it was placed in that trust
fund.
"The same basic rule should apply to the Social Security trust
fund. Those moneys should be used only for the purpose for which
the money is collected. If, when I practiced law, I violated that
trust, I could be subject to disbarment....In fact, I could be
criminally prosecuted by the district attorney.
"In the instance of the Social Security trust fund, those moneys
are used for purposes other than for Social Security recipients,
and that is wrong. But here in Congress, we have become pretty
careless and callous in what we do with trust fund moneys.
…
"Are we as a country violating a trust by spending Social Security
trust fund moneys for some purpose other than for which they were
intended? The obvious answer is yes.
"The President … along with members of Congress, is not
being brought before a bar association for purposes of disbarment
or some type of administrative remedy. There is no prosecuting
authority saying what you have done is illegal. But the fact is it
is wrong....
"The trust funds resources are there for the well-being of those
who have paid into the Social Security system. We should use those
resources to see that Social Security recipients are treated well
but also treated fairly and treated equitably.
'Hands Off the Surpluses'
"It is time for Congress to take its hands off the Social Security
surpluses. Stop hiding the horrible truth of the fiscal
irresponsibility that we have talked about here. It is time to
return those dollars to the hands of those who earned them-the
Social Security beneficiaries and future beneficiaries....
"Maybe what we should do in conjunction with the President to
really carry this conspiracy to its appropriate end is, rather than
having it called the Social Security trust fund, why do we not
change it and call it the 'Social Security slush fund'?"
Mr. Franc, who
has held a number of positions on Capitol Hill, is vice president
of Government Relations at The Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in Human Events