Every month, 73 million Americans—including retirees, people with disabilities, and those who have lost a family member—rely on a Social Security check to meet their needs, from making rent to buying groceries, after a lifetime of paying into the system. But despite its overwhelming popularity, the Trump administration is taking a wrecking ball to it. The effort by Elon Musk and his so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to cut the fundamental safety net program’s offices, personnel, and services is ripping out the rug from underneath poor and working-class Americans and undermining their trust in government.
Social Security—signed into law in 1935 by Franklin D. Roosevelt—“represents the basic part of our social contract: that we as a collective will take care of our own,” Roosevelt Institute President and CEO Elizabeth Wilkins said on Scripps News last week. It’s the government’s job to ensure “people get the money that they’re owed,” not to make it harder for them to retire in dignity by taking away basic services—like the administration’s (now-abandoned) proposal to end phone services in a disingenuous hunt for fraud.
Social Security provides the “economic security that people expect from their American government after a lifetime of work,” said Wilkins, and for most retirees, payments make up more than half of their monthly income. “This isn’t Twitter,” she said. “This is the basis of millions of Americans’ financial security that we’re playing with.”
The Trump administration’s destruction of Social Security and other safety net programs could also worsen existing inequalities by “shifting the burden to America's mothers, sisters and daughters, who will have to help their families cover the gap,” Roosevelt Fellow Jessica Calarco writes for MSNBC. “Elon Musk is cutting federal spending, but women will end up paying the price.”
There are real concerns about Social Security funding dwindling in the next few decades without congressional action, a policy problem that needs to be addressed seriously. But “the answer isn’t to tear it down,” said Wilkins. “The answer is to rise to the challenge of what Americans expect and deserve from their government.”
To put it simply, “it’s to invest.”
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