


Trump's current stance also sets him apart from other candidates or potential hopefuls who have weighed in on the issue in recent weeks. But in an interview with CNBC in January 2020, Trump was asked about entitlements and said "we will take a look at that." He has also called for eliminating payroll taxes, which fund Social Security and in part Medicare. "If we reformed it for people in my generation, you wouldn't see immediately probably any savings in the budget, but I think the long term picture would then improve dramatically."īut Trump's own stance on entitlements appears to have shifted, a sign he may believe the issue is a vulnerability for Republicans moving forward.Įarlier this month he claimed "under no circumstances should Republicans vote to cut a single penny from Medicare or Social Security." It echoed his stance when he launched his first presidential bid back in 2015. "But I think what we need to do, for people in my generation particularly, is start to restructure the program in a way that's going to be financially sustainable," DeSantis said in 2012. He added that he would not change the programs for people already in or near retirement and said "there's settled expectations there, particularly for people that are actively on it now." Augustine Record that he'd support privatizing Social Security and Medicare, and there's a need for "some market forces in there, more consumer choice, and make it so that it's not just basically a system that's going to bankrupt when you have new people coming into it." These resolutions did not become law.ĭuring his 2012 campaign to represent Florida's 6th Congressional District, he told the St. Scott has since revised the plan to exclude the two programs.ĭeSantis previously voted for budget proposals as a member of Congress in 2013, 20 that would raise the retirement age for Social Security, as well as establish a bipartisan commission to look at any further reforms to the program. Rick Scott of Florida that called for the sunset of all federal legislation after five years unless Congress acts.

He then took his message on the road, targeting a plan by Republican Sen. Biden appeared to set the negotiation stage from the podium taking Social Security and Medicare off the table. In his recent State of the Union address, Mr. Some Republicans are leaning into a longtime GOP stance that programs such as Social Security and Medicare must be examined, while others are shifting away from touching such programs, discussion which has proven in the past to become unpopular with some voters.Īs the crisis over the debt limit looms, President Biden has warned Republicans are gunning for Social Security and Medicare. It's an issue Democrats are all too happy to seize on as the GOP primary race for the White House starts to take shape.
#Hands off medicare how to
Debate over the future of Medicare and Social Security have exposed a rift among Republican presidential candidates and potential 2024 hopefuls as GOP lawmakers and the White House face off over how to address the ballooning federal debt.
