Republican Proposed Medicare & Medicaid Cuts
Unpopular across USA
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM
(By
Michael McAuliff, Huffington Post
)
May 23, 2011
A coalition of progressive groups is warning swing state
Democrats to think twice before embracing parts of the
Republican budget plan that would privatize Medicare and
cut Medicaid.
Armed with a stark set of polls they plan to release
this week, the groups Progressive Change Campaign
Committee, Democracy for America, MoveOn.org and Credo
Action are telling Democratic Sens. Sherrod Brown
(Ohio), Claire McCaskill (Mo.), Jon Tester (Mont.), and
Amy Klobuchar (Minn.) to stand tall on the popular
social safety net programs.
"Democrats need to say firmly any tampering
whatsoever with Medicare and Medicaid benefits is off
the table," said Charles Chamberlain, Democracy for
America's political director.
All four of the senators are up for reelection in 2012.
McCaskill's Missouri shows the largest divide in surveys
done by the Democratically friendly Public Policy
Polling, especially on Medicare. When asked, "In order
to reduce the national debt, would you support or oppose
cutting spending on Medicare, which is the government
health insurance program for the elderly?" just 19
percent of respondents said they would, while an
overwhelming 77 percent said they would oppose cuts.
Similarly, 20 percent back cuts in Brown's Ohio, while
76 percent oppose them. In Tester's Montana, it's 24
percent favoring cuts and 71 percent against. Just 26
percent of Minnesotans would want Klobuchar to vote to
cut Medicare, while 69 percent say to vote against.
The numbers are almost as sharp on support for cutting
Medicaid in all four states: Ohio is 33 percent in favor
to 61 percent against; Missouri is 32 percent to 63
percent; Montana is 36 percent to 59 percent; and
Minnesota 33 to 62 percent.
The GOP budget proposal penned by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.)
released in April advises turning Medicaid into a grant
program run by the states, while the federal government
would subsidize retirees buy Medicare plans themselves
in the private health insurance market. The
Congressional Budget Office estimates seniors'
medical costs would rise twice as fast under the GOP
Medicare plan as they are rising now, hitting more than
$12,000 in out-of-pocket costs in 2021.
Democrats have been pounding the GOP relentlessly on the
issue, and it's become a central issue in Tuesday's
special election in New York's Republican-leaning 26th
Congressional District, where the Democrat took the lead
over the weekend.
The Democratic Party is showing no signs of letting up,
but the progressive groups wanted to remind the
swing-state senators moving toward the GOP position
could hurt them as they head into their campaigns.
"Democrats are right to blast Republicans for supporting
Paul Ryans plan to eliminate Medicare," said Stephanie
Taylor, the co-founder of the Progressive Change
Campaign Committee. "This polling shows Democratic
incumbents facing re-election in 2012 will have
overwhelming support if they defend Medicare and
Medicaid and will have serious problems if they vote
to cut either program in any way."
Some critics have downplayed the results of PPP polling
as favoring Democrats, but the questions in these
surveys were modeled on the well-regarded ABC
News/Washington Post survey, which found similar results
nationally in late April, with just 21 percent
supporting Medicare cuts and 30 percent supporting
Medicaid cuts.