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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 3, 2005
INVOKING SPIRIT OF FDR, UNIFIED SENATE DEMOCRATS DEMAND
PRESIDENT NOT ADD TRILLIONS TO DEBT IN RISKY PRIVATIZATION SCHEME
Birth Tax to reach at least $30K by 2015 for every American
Senators Reid, Schumer and Dem. Caucus will release letter
SIGNED BY 44 SENATORS to Bush urging him to send a responsible Soc.
Sec. Reform package to Congress- not one that unduly burdens future
generations
Today, standing outside the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial,
Senators Reid, Schumer and members of the Senate Democratic Caucus
presented a united front to fight against the President’s
plans to send the national debt skyrocketing by privatizing Social
Security – increasing the burden up to $30,000 per capita.
The Senators released a letter
to the White House from a unified Democratic Caucus calling on President
Bush to send a plan for Social Security reform that does not exacerbate
the national debt.
Senator Schumer said, “Today the Senate Democratic Caucus
stands united against the idea that Social Security reform should
explode the national debt. We will not allow the President to play
retirement roulette and increase the tax burden on future generations
with more borrowing. This growing ‘Birth Tax’ will saddle
every American with over $30,000 in debt – hardly worthy of
the great man this memorial represents – Franklin D. Roosevelt
– the architect of greatest American program in the 20th Century.”
“Instead we urge the President to work with us on a plan
to keep Social Security intact and able to serve the coming generations
without adding $2 trillion in new debt. I don’t understand
why the President is still enamored with private accounts, which
I believe is a code word for the ultimate undoing of Social Security,”
Schumer continued.
With national debt already reaching record highs, the Senators
said that the President’s plan to siphon payroll tax money
into private accounts would add trillions in additional debt that
future generations will have to repay. The Senators called this
added burden a “birth tax,” since it is money each newborn
American and all Americans will have to pay back with interest,
and warned that the President’s privatization plan would increase
the per capita debt to close to $30,000 per capita by 2015 –
up 150% from the 2001 per capita debt of $12,000.
Schumer noted that:
· With no further increases in spending or changes in tax
policy, it is predicted the per capita share of the national debt
will grow to over $18,000 by 2015 – a 50 percent increase
in the portion of the public debt owed by each American.
· When the costs of other spending and tax proposals supported
the Administration are added to the mix, including the costs of
the new supplemental, the likely ongoing war costs in Iraq, the
cost of making the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts permanent, and additional
defense spending brings the per capita figure to over $25,000 in
2015.
· Setting aside 4 percentage points of the 12.4 percent Social
Security payroll tax – nearly one-third of the tax –
would require the government to borrow close to $2 trillion over
the next 10 years in order to pay scheduled benefits to current
and near-retirees. This would bring the per capita share of the
debt to close to $30,000 by 2015, the end of the ten-year budget
window.
The Senators today invoked the image of President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt who pioneered Social Security and sent a letter
signed by the entire Senate Democratic Caucus to President Bush,
calling on the Administration to put forth a responsible reform
proposal instead of a plan that would more than double the burden
of the national debt for future generations.
In their letter,
the Senators wrote, “In the same way that it would be immoral
from a generational standpoint for a grandparent to borrow from
his grandson’s college fund to buy a big-screen TV, we believe
it is immoral to borrow another $2 trillion from future generations
to finance Social Security reform. We are spending enough of our
kids’ money. Our country needs to get back to following the
teachings of Romans 13:8, which says we should ‘let no debt
remain outstanding.’”
Schumer added, “Every member here also knows that Social
Security needs some changes in order make sure it’s there
for future generations of Americans. The question we have to wrestle
with is, what sorts of changes? Does the program need minor tweaking,
or does it need to be dismantled and replaced with something else?”
“We have come to this conclusion not because we believe that
government does everything right, but because we believe the President’s
solution is fundamentally flawed. Ironically, it makes the underlying
problem – restoring long-term solvency – more difficult
to solve, by taking money out of the program at exactly the wrong
time. In addition, siphoning payroll tax money into private accounts
will add trillions in additional debt that future generations will
have to repay. That’s unacceptable.”
To view the letter to the president click here.
To view the chart click here.
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