I do it in bold because I never figured out how to multi-quote. I follow the instructions and it still doesn't work for me.
He says he wants them to co-opt out of it, which is actually more ambiguous. He emphasizes they could do it better (yeah, right, like Perry's interest in providing less unemployment compensation then would have come with federal strings money), but I suspect if he was pressed on it, he would say the states could do something far less or not at all, if they so chose.
But, of course, this is one of the many problems with entitlements: they become friggin' untouchable, even as economic reality engulfs them. Look at Greece.
It is definitely hurting. The Ryan Plan despite what they say is gospel in the party because the House voted for it and most Republicans in the Senate. Many of them because they are being grilled by constituents in town meeting are trying to distance themselves from it, but are doing a piss poor job because they are afraid to completely disown it because they also don't want to anger the tea party folks. It doesn't matter to voters if the program isn't sustainable in it's current state. They don't like the Republican solution. The problem for Republicans is they are no longer a safe protest vote. They have politically blundered by voting for the Ryan Plan and are now a scary alternative. The only thing that saves their bacon is if a debt relief program is agreed to that includes Medicare. But I just read if there is no agreement a possible option because of some ambiguous language in the 14th amendment, Obama might raise the debt on his own and it might be difficult to challenge it in the courts because the only relevant party is Congress, and you would need both houses for a lawsuit and the Senate wouldn't go along.
If it is going to be a contest of Medicare under Obamacare and the Ryan Plan, Obamacare wins. The Bloomberg poll shows that. Of course it will still be an issue in nine months. And will be magnified with Rick Perry as the candidate trying to explain his Social Security comments.
If it is going to be a contest of Medicare under Obamacare and the Ryan Plan, Obamacare wins. The Bloomberg poll shows that. Of course it will still be an issue in nine months. And will be magnified with Rick Perry as the candidate trying to explain his Social Security comments.
But, of course, your argument then is that they risk losing Tea Party support. But the mistake here is in assuming that Tea Partiers love the Ryan plan inherently, rather than for its budget impact. That changes the entire thing. See below...
I'll try to find that Bloomberg poll and post it here.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-0...oll-shows.html
This is not ambiguous. The relevant numbers is independents' strong disapproval.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-0...oll-shows.html
This is not ambiguous. The relevant numbers is independents' strong disapproval.
Continuing on what I was saying above: the Ryan plan is an entire budget, not just a Medicare proposal. I happen to think it works just fine as a Medicare proposal alone, but part of it's appeal is supposed to be the budget savings. But polls like this don't present it that way. They present it as a) current Medicare versus b) this new Medicare. They leave out the whole reason b) is being suggested: the savings. That's like saying "do you want this brand new car, or this used car?" without mentioning the fact that the used car costs $5,000 less.
Guess what happens when you frame it as a budget question, pitting Obama's budget versus Ryan's? Well, very little super-recent polling has been done on it as far as I can tell with some light searching (which is annoying), but Gallup had the two neck and neck initially.
And if they want to ask an even more comprehensive question, they would ask whether they prefer saving money through changes to Medicare, or tax increases of some sort. Because that's the choice we face. You can't isolate public opinion on a policy change without considering its effects elsewhere. And you definitely can't when those effects are the reason it's being proposed in the first place.
These are the choices we actually face, not some hypothetical where we pit current, unsustainable Medicare against some isolated part of an entirely different budget. That makes no sense.
Blowouts are not plauable these days? Why? Because of red state, blue state? And what is a blowout? Mondale and Dukakis were pretty much blowouts also. McGovern still would have won even without superdelegates. He won more primaries. Bachmann is not going to win the nomination anyway, but Rick Perry might, and I doubt he would lose by a blowout, but I think he would be a very poor candidate, with so much he has said on the record to criticize and constantly being on the defensive.