WASHINGTON – Facing ever more urgent warnings about the exploding costs of federal pension and health programs, President Obama is expected to include long-sought reductions in Social Security and Medicare when he rolls out his budget Wednesday.
But while the president's budget may offer substantial overtures to Republicans, who long have pressed for entitlement cuts, the White House faces significant opposition from some Minnesota Democrats and others in Congress who are positioning themselves as defenders of the sick and elderly.
Chief among them is U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison, chief deputy Democratic Whip and co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, which is in the forefront of liberal efforts to block any proposals that would lower cost-of-living increases and raise age requirements.
Another prominent Minnesota voice is U.S. Sen. Al Franken, who has warned against budget savings that might "shift costs to our seniors, or parents raising children with disabilities."
That wariness in Minnesota and elsewhere — combined with uniform GOP opposition to any new tax revenues — could derail even the faintest hopes of reaching an elusive "grand" budget bargain this year, or in the foreseeable future.
The political standoff is playing out against government reports projecting insolvency for Medicare by 2024, with Social Security following suit in 2033. Thereafter, without changes in the law, payroll taxes would cover only between 75 percent and 87 percent of benefits, creating a growing gap.
The longer that lawmakers put off a fix, the programs' trustees say, the more intractable the problem becomes. "This year we sound the same warning, but with greater urgency," they said in their last report in November.
But those warnings have been overwhelmed by political sparring over the month-old sequester budget cuts, which cover a smaller slice of the government spending pie.