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Organizational Letter to Oppose a Social Security Debt Commission [1]

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Date: 2023-11

November 8, 2023

Dear Senator/Representative:

The undersigned organizations write in strong opposition to the formation of a debt commission which has been promoted during the ongoing debate around government funding. The White House has accurately described such a commission as a “death panel” for Social Security.

It is imperative to understand that Social Security does not add a penny to the federal debt. It has its own dedicated revenue, cannot spend a penny unless it has sufficient dedicated revenue to cover the cost of all benefits and associated administrative costs, and has no borrowing authority.

Social Security provides working families with invaluable insurance against the loss of wages in the event of death, disability, and old age. It is essential to its nearly 67 million beneficiaries. It is especially important to women, people with disabilities, people of color, the LGBTQ+ community and others who have been disadvantaged in the workforce.

All of the options for eliminating Social Security’s projected shortfall, manageable in size and still a decade away, are fully understood. In this Congress alone, several legislative proposals that do just that have been introduced with numerous cosponsors. The only reason to make changes to Social Security via a closed-door commission is to cut already modest earned benefits — something the American people overwhelmingly oppose — while avoiding political accountability.

As currently structured, the commission’s recommendations would have priority over other legislative business, and they would have to be considered without amendment. Moreover, if this vote is required to occur right after the upcoming election, incumbents running for re-election will be able to deny their support of highly unpopular and unwise cuts to hard working Americans’ earned benefits — and then vote for those cuts in the lame duck Congress.

Some have made statements comparing this commission to the so-called Greenspan commission that preceded the enactment of the Social Security Amendments of 1983. However, they are nothing alike. The Greenspan commission recommendations were nothing more than recommendations. What was ultimately proposed and considered by Congress went through regular order, with committee hearings and the ability to amend and debate, both in committee and on the floor of both the House and Senate.

Indeed, the late Robert M. Ball—who represented then-Speaker Tip O’Neill both on the commission and in negotiating the Social Security package with the Reagan White House—was so concerned that the Greenspan commission might be invoked to force another commission at a later date, that he requested, literally on his deathbed, that the following warning be published. In his words, “[t]o suggest that the Greenspan Commission provides a model for resolving questions about Social Security’s future would be laughable if it were not so dangerous.”

Congress should not abdicate its responsibility to make hard choices through regular order by hiding behind a fiscal commission. Congress already has a process to confront the federal debt. That process is known as reconciliation. Revealingly, Social Security cuts are excluded from the reconciliation procedure, because, as previously stated,the program is totally self-funded, cannot pay benefits or associated costs without the revenue to cover the costs, has no borrowing authority, and, therefore, does not add a penny to the deficit. Consequently, if a debt commission with jurisdiction over Social Security were to be formed,its purpose would be clear: to cut its modest benefits, while avoiding political accountability.

In short, we consider support for a debt commission to be support for cutting Social Security. We urge you to decline to do so.

Thank you for considering our views.

Sincerely,

ACA Consumer Advocacy

AFL-CIO

AFSCME

AFT Washington Retiree Chapter 8045R

Alliance for Retired Americans

American Family Voices

American Federation of Government Employees

American Federation of Musicians

American Federation of Teachers

American Federation of Teachers, Washington

American Postal Workers Union

Arkansas Community Organizations

Beta Cell Action

Blue Future

BOWL PAC

California Alliance for Retired Americans

Campaign for America’s Future

Center for Common Ground

Center For Economic And Policy Research

Center for Popular Democracy

Church World Service

Citizen Action of New York

Coalition on Human Needs

Communications Workers of America

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Consumer Action

District Eight National Alliance of Postal & Federal Employees

Doctors for America

Economic Opportunity Institute

Economic Policy Institute

Equality Federation

Foundation for Integrative AIDS Research

Generations United

Goddard Riverside-NYC

Health Care for America Now

Healthcare for All Minnesota

Healthcare is a Human Right – Washington

Indivisible

International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees

International Brotherhood of Boilermakers

International Brotherhood of Teamsters

International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers

Justice for All Network

Justice in Aging

Labor Campaign for Single Payer

Long Beach Alliance for Clean Energy

Long Island Center for Independent Living, Inc.

Massachusetts Senior Action Council

Metro New York Health Care for All

Michigan People’s Campaign

Michigan United

Midtown South Community Council

MomsRising

MoveOn

National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd

National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare

National Employment Law Project

National Federation of Federal Employees

National LGBTQ Task Force

National Organization for Women

National Partnership for Women & Families

National Postal Mail Handlers Union

National Union of Healthcare Workers

National Women’s Law Center

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

New Mexico AFSCME Retirees

New Mexico Alliance for Retired Americans

North Seattle Progressives

Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition

NY Statewide Senior Action Council

NYS Alliance for Retired Americans

Office of Peace, Justice and Integrity of Creation, Sisters of Charity of New York

One Payer States

Our Revolution

P Street

Pacific Islander Health Board of WA

Painters and Allied Trades International Union

People’s Action

Physicians for a National Health Program

Physicians for a National Health Program – NY Metro Chapter

Physicians for a National Health Program – Washington

Progress America

Progressive Democrats of America

PSARA Education Fund

Public Citizen

Puget Sound Advocates for Retirement Action

Revolving Door Project

Rise Up WV

SEIU 521

Social Security Works

Strengthen Social Security Coalition

Swing Left Bakersfield, CA

Tennessee Health Care Campaign

The Other 98% Lab

The People United

Transportation Trades Department

U.S. Federation of the Sisters of St. Joseph

United Mine Workers of America

Unity Fellowship of Christ Church-NYC

Upper East Side for Change

Upper West Side Action Group: MoveOn/Indivisible/SwingLeft

Utility Workers Union of America

VOCAL-NY

Washington CAN

We the 45 Million

West Virginia Citizen Action

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[1] Url: https://socialsecurityworks.org/letters/organizational-letter-to-oppose-a-social-security-debt-commission/

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