!!!!!!!No, White House advisor Gene Sperling, entitlement cuts are not necessary!!!!!!! [View all]
Last edited Sat Oct 26, 2013, 09:41 AM - Edit history (1)
Take Action: Defend Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid
As the founder of the Defending Social Security Caucus, Bernie is fighting every day to protect our earned benefits. Stand with Senator Bernie Sanders and a diverse coalition of thousands of fellow progressives now and demand that Congress and the President oppose any grand bargain which cuts Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid benefits. Add your name today!
http://www.americawantsnocuts.com/americasfuture/
You know what would be a really, really crappy idea? Making cuts to programs that are keeping millions from poverty in order to make a bad economy marginally better. But that's what President Obama's top economic advisorGene Sperling, director of the White Houses National Economic Councilis telling Democrats they'll have to swallow.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In his usual elliptical and prolix way, Sperling seemed to be laying out the contours of a bargain with Republicans thats quite a bit different that what most Democrats seem prepared to accept. What stood out to me was how he kept winding back around to the importance of entitlement cuts as part of a deal, as if he were laying the groundwork to blunt liberal anger. Right now, the official Democratic position is that theyll accept entitlement cuts only in exchange for new revenuesomething most Republicans reject. If Sperling mentioned revenue at all, I missed it.
But he dwelt at lengthand with some passionon the need for more stimulus, though he avoided using that dreaded word. He seemed to hint at a budget deal that would trade near-term investment (the preferred euphemism for stimulus) for long-term entitlement reform. That would be an important shift and one that would certainly upset many Democrats. [...]
Sometimes here [in Washington] we start to think that the end goal of our public policy is to hit a particular budget or spending or revenue metricas if those are the goals in and of itself. But its important to remember that each of these metrics
are means to larger goals.
Right now, I think there is among a lot of people a consensus as to what the ingredients of a pro-growth fiscal policy are. It would be a fiscal policy thatyesdid give more confidence in the long run that we have a path on entitlement spending and revenues that gives confidence in our long-term fiscal position and that were not pushing off unbearable burdens to the next generation. That is very important.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/10/25/1250673/-No-White-House-advisor-Gene-Sperling-entitlement-cuts-are-not-necessary