The Third Rail: What To Do With Social Security?

Softer Rhetoric on the Right; Liberals' Seek "No Cuts" Pledge

ByABC News
August 13, 2010, 6:07 PM

August 16, 2010 -- Painting Republicans as bogeymen who want to privatize sacred entitlement programs, Democrats have turned to Social Security to save them in the coming Midterm election.

"I'll fight with everything I've got to stop those who want to gamble your social security on Wall Street," President Obama said in his weekly video address on Saturday, the 75 anniversary of Social Security's enactment.

Along with Medicare, Social Security remains a sacred cow in American politics and focusing on protecting them is probably good politics for Democrats as they head into the fall elections where Republicans are expected to make big gains.

But there is political peril in the issue for both parties, especially as the President's bipartisan debt commission considers ways to fix Social Security before it is expected to run out of money in 2037. The commission is mulling several options to keep the entitlement program solvent, including cutting benefits, and raising the retirement age to 70.

Reading the writing on the wall and expecting the commission to recommend some entitlement cuts, a coalition of liberal groups announced a plan this week to confront members of both parties at town hall meetings and prod them to sign a pledge never to cut benefits.

The campaign by activist groups could complicate the issue for national Democrats, who commemorated the 75th anniversary of Social Security on Saturday by hitting hard against Republican candidates who have in the past advocated cutting or privatizing the social safety net.

Another coalition, comprising unions like the AFL-CIO and groups like the NAACP, bases its opposition to any form of social security cuts, on seven principles, according to its website:

"Social Security did not cause the federal deficit; its benefits should not be cut to reduce the deficit," the group's website says.

The focus on protecting social security has already worked to some degree for Democrats. Republicans candidates, many of whom embraced the limited government ideology of the Tea Party during primary runs, have tempered their official rhetoric on the program and recalibrated their positions in favor of protecting social security for the current generation of seniors.

For example Sharron Angle, the Republican candidate for Senate in Nevada, has sought to reinvent herself on the issue of social security with a new TV ad, in which she pledges to save the program.

"We have a contract with our seniors, who have put into social security in good faith. I'd like to save social security by locking the lockbox, putting the money back into the trust fund, so the government can no longer raid our retirement," says Angle in the ad, in which she is addressing a group of middle aged and elderly people.

Softening Social Security Rhetoric on the Right

This represents a break from Angle's past comments. Her website used to say that Social Security should be "transitioned out" in favor of "free market alternatives.

But that has been replaced with a markedly different stance.