Tuesday, May 3, was another hectic day in President Bush's
unrelenting effort to overhaul the unstable Social Security
program. "I believe," he told 2,000 factory workers in Mississippi,
"I have a duty to talk about the problem and propose a solution."
Indeed, much of the day's media coverage addressed various aspects
of this top-tier legislative battle.
But if we can assume that a member of Congress' Web page is a
window into his or her legislative soul, few others feel the same
sense of duty. A quick review of all 100 Senate Web pages on May 3
suggests that the President is waging a lonely campaign on behalf
of Social Security reform.
Almost half of Senate Democrats feature the Social Security debate
prominently on their home pages, inviting constituents to sign
electronic petitions opposing the Bush plan, read relevant press
releases, view senatorial statements on the Senate floor, or
ascertain just how much they stand to "lose" under "Bush
privatization." The latter includes a link to the
discredited calculator designed by the liberal Center for Budget
and Policy Priorities and touted by Senate Minority Leader
Harry Reid.
Reid and 17 of his Democratic colleagues link to the flawed
calculator, including several who ought to know better, such as
Montana's Max Baucus, senior Democrat on the Senate Finance
Committee (where any Social Security reform bill will originate),
and two other members of that committee, New York's Chuck Schumer
and Arkansas' Blanche Lincoln. Others offering their constituents
this misleading link include Senators Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts,
Jon Corzine of New Jersey, Barbara Boxer of California, Debbie
Stabenow of Michigan and Maria Cantwell of Washington.
Visitors to the sites maintained by Republican senators, in
contrast, would be clueless that a Republican President has
invested so much political capital over such a sustained period of
time on an issue of such importance. Barely half a dozen of the 55
Senate Republicans have chosen to highlight Social Security.
Ohio residents visiting the site of Sen. George Voinovich to learn
about issues affecting seniors, for example, would search in vain
for any mention of the Social Security debate. Instead, they would
find a friendly letter from the senator lauding his work to make
prescription drugs available through Medicare.
Special kudos, though, go to GOP senators John Sununu of New
Hampshire, Larry Craig of Idaho, Johnny Isakson of Georgia and Norm
Coleman of Minnesota for making their commitment to principled
Social Security reform crystal clear on their Web pages.
Medicaid Melee: "Don't cut the health care for the most
vulnerable," the full-page ad by the Coalition to Protect America's
Health Care screams at the reader. It warns that cuts to Medicaid,
the program that provides health care and nursing home coverage to
the poor, could "affect one-third of all births, one-fourth of all
children" and put "millions of seniors and disabled Americans" at
risk. Worse, the proposed cuts would "jeopardize critical hospital
services" and limit the ability of hospitals "to invest in new
technology" that could--drum roll, please--"save your life."
Senior members of Congress agreed. West Virginia Sen. Jay
Rockefeller described the cuts as nothing less than "horrific."
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) decried them as "a prescription
for disaster" for those "who depend on the program as their only
means of health care coverage."
Wow! Has there been a resurgence of fiscal belt-tightening on
Capitol Hill that we've all missed? Alas, no.
All this hand wringing came in response to the effort by Republican
leaders on Capitol Hill to craft a budget that, among other things,
would reduce Medicaid's explosive growth by a total of $10 billion
over five years. Sound like the sort of legislative initiative that
warrants such life-and-death rhetoric?
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Judd Gregg of New Hampshire said
it best. "Over the next five years," he pointed out during the
floor debate, "we are going to spend $1.12 trillion, a huge amount
of money, on Medicaid. This budget is suggesting that we reduce
that rate of spending over the next five years by $10 billion; $10
billion on a $1.12 trillion base. The practical effect of this is
we are taking a program that is going to grow at 41% over the next
five years and reducing its rate of growth to 39%."
Gregg was optimistic Congress would deliver on this "small but
symbolically important" effort. "We can do that," he insisted. "If
we are halfway decent as managers of the tax dollars of
Americans."
Under last month's budget agreement, Congress has to adopt
legislation to slow the growth in federal entitlement programs such
as Medicaid and federal farm programs. As minuscule as they are,
these budget savings nevertheless will provoke liberals to mount
the sort of high volume, sky-is-falling lobby campaigns described
above. As David Walker, the respected head of the Government
Accountability Office, has put it, entitlement programs are on an
"unsustainable" course that will require Congress to intervene and
enact legislation to alleviate this threat.
The $10 billion in "horrific" reductions in Medicaid's rate of
growth represent an early trial run to gauge whether Congress is up
to what ultimately will be a Herculean task.
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