All right. I've had a couple glasses of wine and it's been a really, really long week. So let's talk about the legislative filibuster.
The filibuster is the rule that the Senate has that certain things requires 60 votes rather than a simple 51 vote majority.
You may be confused by this because a lot of legislation has been considered lately that is only required 51 votes. The most prominent example of this would be the 2017 health care fight over the repeal of Obamacare.
Technically, that legislation was a type of legislation called a budget reconciliation which has different rules.
I am not even going to try and explain budget reconciliation because I have been doing politics for almost a decade and I still don't understand it. If you would like to read a Congressional Research Service report on it, there's one here: google.com/url?sa=t&sourc…
(if you are a young policywonk, you should spend a lot of time reading CRS reports. I always go to them as a first source.)
But TLDR, to pass legislation RN in the United States Senate, you need 60 votes. Because any individual senator can institute a filibuster and hold the vote unless 60 senators vote to overturn that individual senator's objections.
If you want to use budget reconciliation, the rules are really f****** complicated and you can't do certain things. One of those rules relates to trust funds. Because Social Security is funded by a trust fund.
I will say at this point that you may have heard of budget reconciliation because someone was talking about something Congress was going to do called a "bird bath".
But Senator Bryd wanted to protect Social Security and so there are extra rules when it comes to budget reconciliation and Social Security.
and those rules are really helpful in some ways because it means that it takes 60 votes in the Senate to do anything about Social Security. But it also means that it takes 60 votes in the Senate to do anything about Social Security.
Are Social Security benefits too low? Yes. Are Social Security benefits not fully funded for the next 75 years? Yes. How do we fix this? Well, we raise payroll taxes. And the sooner we do that, the cheaper it is going to be for everyone in the long run.
Rep. Larson has a bill in that would modestly raise the Social Security taxes you see on your paycheck to fund more generous benefits for low-income folks who haven't been able to save for retirement and make sure that every higher income earner is paying their fair share.
(At this point, I'm going to mention that anyone who makes over a certain amount of money--$137,700 in 2020--doesn't pay Social Security taxes on income above that cap and that's f****** wrong.)
But to make any changes to Social Security, we need 60 votes. To ensure higher income earners are paying their fair share, toake sure that seniors and PWD who rely only on Social Security are not living in poverty--all of that, requires 60 votes.
So in a lot of ways, the filibuster protects Social Security the most of all social programs.
And I still want a nuke the filibuster the minute that Democrats have control of the Senate.
Because we can't do any of the other positive stuff unless we get rid of the filibuster.
Do you think SGA is too low and we really should make it higher because you can't live on $1260 a month in the US? Nuke the filibuster.
Do you think that seniors and people with disabilities shouldn't live in poverty and we should raise the average Social Security benefit? Nuke the filibuster.
Do you think we should make sure that the highest income earners are paying their fair share towards Social Security? Nuke the filibuster.
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I have been prompted tonight to share this story, so... professionally, I do public policy. And looking at 2020, my plan was to do comprehensive marriage reform for people with disabilities.
I had a whole plan. I had talked to many of the loudest voices in the field about how to make sure marriage equality worked for everyone. I had a bill idea that I was planning to take to the hill. I was planning a whole media strategy with my organization.
A short thread about the idea of choice and the poisonous ways it's used in policy work.
There is a deep and abiding assumption choice is an absolute good. Politicians rarely say they're going to take away choice. I always think of Obama's promise that people could choose to keep their health care plan after the ACA was passed.
Except, of course, when it comes to low income people. There's no choice about working and receiving SNAP benefits--if you need help paying for food, you've got to try and work.
A short 101 on Medicaid HCBS funding because I know it can be confusing to everyone. Medicaid is health insurance for the lowest income folks, which includes many people with disabilities. HCBS are the home and community based services people with disabilities can receive.
I say "can" receive because HCBS services are optional. Many services are mandatory, or required by the federal Medicaid law. HCBS are not. Often folks have to get on a waiver to access these services and waivers have waiting lists that can last decades.
This is partially because when Medicaid was created back in 1965, the traditional services provided to people with disabilities were institutional services--psychiatric asylums, facilities for people with physical or intellectual or developmental disabilities, etc.
For people new to disability policy, SSI is how we support the lowest income people with disabilities and older adults. It's an incredibly important program, but one that hasn't been updated in decades.
But a mental illness is a disability. These interventions are not only inappropriate for children with intellectual and developmental disabilities, they're also inappropriate for children with mental health disabilities.
And, hot take, also really inappropriate for adults with mental health disabilities. We are outsourcing mental health care to the police.
I will, for what feels like the hundredth time, remind everyone that Florida has chosen not to expand Medicaid. Meaning that people are serious mental illness do not have access to even the basic health care available via Medicaid.