Absent Progressive Uproar, Social Security and Medicare Face Axe
If U.S. citizens are increasingly concerned that the Democratic Party is no longer willing to fight off the right-wing attack on Social Security, Medicare, and other key social programs, Sen. Dick Durbin, President Obama and other party leaders have recently offered plenty of evidence to increase that worry.
Since the end of the government shutdown and standoff over the debt limit ended last week, Obama has repeatedly said that he wants to find a "balanced" solution to the ongoing budget debate with Republican lawmakers.
Unless a broad-based populist movement against such a deal manifestsand soonthe American public should expect some scenario in which programs like Medicare and Social Security receive long-term cuts in exchange for a short-term budget deal with Republicans.
In his first public remarks following the reopening of the government, Obama said his goal would be a "balanced approach to a responsible budget" and later declared: "The challenges we have right now are not short-term deficits; its the long-term obligations that we have around things like Medicare and Social Security."
https://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/10/21-4#.UmVzgkPAJS0.facebook
(cross-posted politics 2013)