‘It’s all going to be moving very fast’

It’s a shame the article is for subscribers only, but Roll Call had a really interesting item today about the strategery on the Hill surrounding Bush’s Social Security scheme. In particular, the article outlines the next couple of months and challenges some of what we’ve been hearing the past week or so.

Republicans in Congress and the White House say they have nearly finished the first stage of their push to overhaul the Social Security system and will soon begin crafting a bill that could pass both chambers by the end of July.

Indeed, Bush administration officials and senior Republican Congressional staffers said they also are gearing up for the president to begin outlining more details on how he would like to structure his plan to provide private investment accounts under Social Security.

“It’s all going to be moving very fast,” said one Senate Republican leadership aide of the push for Social Security in the next few months.

Word last week was that some Republicans were prepared for a solvency-only discussion, but Roll Call also reported that this isn’t true.

Meanwhile, Senate Republican leaders clarified last week that they will not abandon their plan to include private investment accounts as part of any Social Security measure that comes before the chamber this year. A Thursday Associated Press report had indicated that Senate Republican leaders were toying with taking investment accounts off the table to get Democrats to begin negotiating.

“Personal accounts are an essential part of any reform,” said Bob Stevenson, spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.). “Without personal accounts, all you have left is benefit cuts.”

Well, that and tax increases, but who’s counting.

Clearly, the GOP apparatus didn’t expect the “sales pitch” portion of this initiative to take so long and go so poorly. Nevertheless, Roll Call’s article says the White House has no exit strategy and will likely send the Hill “more specific details of his vision” by May.

Best of all, despite unambiguous pronouncements from leaders like House Speaker Dennis Hastert and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley that there’s no way to get a bill though Congress this year, these guys are still moving forward as if they don’t have a huge political problem on their hands.

During the second and third quarters [of 2005], Congress is also supposed to begin crafting legislation to have a bill passed by both chambers before Members leave for their annual August recess, the aide said. However, Republican leaders would be satisfied if Senate Finance Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) has at least unveiled a bill by the end of July, the aide added.

Still, the timeline assumes that the “final floor fight” on a Social Security overhaul would occur during the fall and winter, in time to have it signed by the president by the end of the year, the aide added.

“It’s very doable that we get a bill done this year,” said Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.), who serves as Chief Deputy Majority Whip and sits on the Ways and Means Committee.

Their unbridled optimism is either quaint or naïve. You be the judge.

That said, conventional wisdom about the future of the GOP approach hasn’t changed at all. First, Republicans may go through the motions of appearing open to cooperation, but including private accounts in the final version is non-negotiable. And second, Dems aren’t about to fall for the scam.

“If Republicans were to come up with a way to bring Democrats to the table on a bill that doesn’t necessarily have personal retirement accounts, we wouldn’t reject that because at least Democrats would be talking,” said the Senate Republican leadership aide.

However, the aide noted that any such bill would eventually have to incorporate private accounts before being brought to the Senate floor.

“Any permanent solution that passes should include personal retirement accounts,” the aide said.

Democrats have steadfastly refused to begin talks on Social Security until Republicans stop trying to convince them and the American people to embrace personal accounts, and Democrats say they are not fooled by the Republican’s apparent plan to get them to the negotiating table only to add private investment accounts to the debate at a later date.

“In most bait-and-switch schemes, the intended target takes the bait before the switch is made,” said Rebecca Kirszner, spokeswoman for Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid. “Democrats have not taken the bait and certainly won’t fall for a switch to privatized accounts, with deep benefit cuts and massive debt.”

Stay tuned.

What I can never figure out is who are these idiots who think that Democrats don’t read Roll Call? Do they really think it’s a good idea to tell reporters ahead of time how they plan to snooker the Dems? Isn’t the first rule of deceiving someone that you should, I don’t know, NOT TELL THEM ABOUT IT? What do these anonymice actually think they are accomplishing? And whatever happened to that famed Bush discipline?

  • A clearer example of theocracy in action there couldn’t be. The only rational excuse for them to be plowing ahead with this in spite of near universal public rejection of their ideas is if they have managed to convince themselves, once again, that “God told me it will be ok so just go ahead on.”

    It’s so downright silly that any sane person would see in a nano-second that they’re heading right for a cliff, but given the lunancy they have already produced ‘in the name of God’ it would actually be more surprising if they suddenly got a dose of sense and called the whole thing off.

    This is going to get interesting.

  • This is just a another Republican headfake, which I politely refer to as horseshit. Bush has no intent of putting anything in writing, at least anywhere that the public can see it. Remember, the first one that blinks, loses. Further, in spite of the prodigious amout of hubris being demonstrated by the Repugs, they still won’t fall on their swords for Bush when they have to face the voters in a little more than a year from August. Let’s all say, together now, HOOOOORSESHIIIITTT !!!

  • This is their M.O. Nothing new about this. They are convinced everything is going their way, even if it isn’t. Truly “faith-based” political strategy. They claim the top of the mountain, presumptively announce that they have won, and then make others *prove* to the world that they didn’t. Except they don’t listen to the proofs themselves, they stay in their little bubble. And it makes them look heroic and like they have “history on their side”, and reduces their opponents to sniveling nay-saying little nabobs of negativism. Once you claim the top, it’s the job of the opposition to try to tear you down, and that makes you look mean or whiny or both. Since in Disney America, it’s all happy happy joy and nobody likes anyone who is negative, nobody wants to hear naysaying.

    This is Marketing 101 folks. You simply state that you have the best product. You make outlandish claims and you lie wantonly, with a straight face. You let your competitors try to prove you wrong. Might makes right. And, if you outspend them (or otherwise have the media locked up), nobody ever hears any of the debunking. It’s beyond the “big lie”, it’s more like– corporate marketing.

    The most powerful ally we have on our side is positivism. Their whole pitch is negative and scare-mongering: “Social Security is bankrupt”, “Social Security won’t be there for you”, etc. Nobody wants to hear crap like that. We should run heroic, patriotic, heart-tugging ads *for* Social Security. Hire the folks who do the ads for Cigna or Health.net or such corporations to make the ads– lots of smiling little children sitting on Grandma’s lap: “Social Security. It’s there for you.” If it makes people in the focus groups cry or go “awwwww”, then we’re done. Let’s leave the Repugs to be the harping, shrill, whiny negative nellies: “But it’s insoooolvent! It’ll be baaankruuupt! T-bills are woooorthlesss! You need private acccouuunts! Waaaah!”

  • If the Repub’s ever get this private account social security bill passed I hope there is rioting in the streets of America. It’s hogwash and we all know it!

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