More on Seniors

VIDEO: Seniors for Giffords

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

Tucson, Ariz. -- Gabrielle Giffords’ Cactus Roots team is stronger than ever. Giffords for Congress today released Seniors for Giffords. This web video features Southern Arizona seniors testifying about their support for Gabrielle.

Gabriele Giffords fights for Southern Arizona seniors. She is a champion for our veterans and military families. She has promised to protect Social Security, while her opponents want to privatize it or, in the words of one of them, “phase it out.”

Gabrielle Giffords is a third generation Southern Arizonan and the only military spouse in Congress. Gabrielle is not like other politicians. She’s voted against a Congressional pay raise every time one has come up, and she doesn’t make earmark requests for campaign contributors. She takes an independent view on the issues and was rated Arizona’s most moderate member of Congress by the National Journal in 2009. Most importantly, Gabrielle stands up for Southern Arizona by working across the aisle to secure the border, protect our servicemen and veterans and create jobs by investing in solar energy.

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Seniors for Giffords

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

Gabriele Giffords fights for Southern Arizona seniors. She is a champion for our veterans and military families. She has promised to protect Social Security.

Video: Veterans for Giffords!

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Veterans for Giffords!

A member of the House Armed Services Committee, Gabrielle improved the new G.I. Bill, worked to pass the biggest VA funding increase ever and fights for the needs of Southern Arizona’s military families.

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Social Security: ‘nefarious’ legislation becomes an American success

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

By Rep. Gabrielle Giffords

The Hill Congress Blog

I would like you to imagine a scene that took place in Congress over a controversial bill.

One congressman from Ohio called the bill “nefarious.” His colleague from Pennsylvania condemned it as an “orgy of ruthless spending.”

These lawmakers weren’t fighting about health care, border security or stimulus spending. And the debate that sparked their fury wasn’t even recent.

No, this debate took place 75 years ago this month as the House of Representatives debated and finally passed Social Security legislation. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who conducted a tireless fight during the dark days of the Great Depression, to pass the legislation, signed it into law on Aug. 14, 1935.

In the ensuing three-quarters of a century, Social Security often has been misunderstood and frequently blamed for many perceived ills of the federal government. But with all due respect to the program’s early congressional opponents, Social Security has proven to be resounding success.

Social Security is the foundation of the modern U.S. pension system. It never was intended to provide an individual’s complete retirement income, but rather to be part of a three-legged income stool, supplementing an employer’s pension and an employee’s personal savings.

From its inception, some critics felt Social Security was an ill-advised interference with personal liberty that would undermine self-reliance. But the program, born in an atmosphere of distrust and suspicion, has worked remarkably well.

Social Security has drastically reduced poverty among elderly and disabled Americans, constituting more than half of the income of nearly two-thirds of retired Americans. For 1 in 6 Americans, Social Security is their only income.

Without Social Security, the number of older Americans living in poverty would be 1 in 2. Because of Social Security, it is only 1 in 12. In Arizona alone, Social Security is preventing 235,000 older people from living in poverty.

Nonetheless, Social Security is not without its critics – including those who call for the partial or even complete privatization of the system.

The impetus for such a dramatic change is clear. Up until this year, tax receipts and other income to the Social Security trust fund have exceeded expenditures. But that trend is slipping away.

This year and next, expenses and payments will exceed revenue. The system is expected to operate in the black for a couple of years after that, but in 2015 – only five years from today – benefits payments will start exceeding tax collections for the foreseeable future.

This is due largely to the inescapable demographic trend created by the Baby Boom generation. Between 2010 and 2030, the number of people aged 65 and older is projected to grow by 76 percent while the number of workers supporting the system is projected to grow by only 6 percent. This spike in Social Security beneficiaries will create a deficit in the Social Security Trust fund beginning in 2037.

But it is important to put the problem in perspective. Experts have projected that if revenue were increased by about one-half of 1 percent, it would make Social Security stable well into the 22nd century.

The president’s deficit commission, which is charged with developing a bipartisan plan to stabilize the soaring national debt, is evaluating a wide range of options to ensure the long-term stability of Social Security.

We can and we will find reasonable ways to make Social Security stable without switching to a risky privatization system. I am unwilling to gamble with seniors’ financial security in the stock market.

While the stock market may – and I stress may – return higher returns over a long period of time, one need only look at the wild gyrations in the past couple of years to see the kind of immense damage privatization could do to seniors too old to wait for a rebound.

For three-quarters of a century, we have proven the critics of 1935 wrong. Social Security is hardly “nefarious.” This “orgy of ruthless spending” has become America’s most successful retirement protection program – and it continues to serve Americans well.

I am dedicated to strengthening Social Security’s long-term finances so that it continues to provide a guaranteed base of retirement, disability and survivor’s income for current and future generations. Seniors have put in a lifetime of hard work, helping to make our economy grow and make our nation great. I refuse to play games with their security and well-being.

CD8 Republicans Unite on Social Security: Privatize It!

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Tucson, Ariz. – Jonathan Paton, Jesse Kelly and Brian Miller are locked in a bitter fight for the Republican nomination, but they have one issue they can all agree on: Social Security must be privatized and gambled on Wall Street.

This Saturday, August 14, Americans will commemorate the 75th birthday of Social Security. Most 75th birthdays are marked with family dinners, birthday cakes and homemade cards from grandchildren. But CD8 GOP candidates Jonathan Paton, Jesse Kelly and Brian Miller have a different idea for Social Security.  They want to privatize it. They refuse to explain where the money for current retirees will come from if people under 55 can opt out of the system in favor of Wall Street.

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CD8 GOP frontrunners want to gamble Social Security in the stock market

Friday, July 30th, 2010

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Forty-five minutes into the CD8 GOP primary debate on KUAT on July 30, 2010, host and moderator Bill Buckmaster asked the candidates if they support privatizing Social Security.  Read their responses for yourself:

Jonathan Paton: “I think we also need to make sure that younger people at least have an option to set aside some of that money to invest it as they see fit. They should have that choice.  Not, not – it shouldn’t be mandated and it shouldn’t be the entire amount, but they should have that choice.”

Jesse Kelly:  “We must… It’s not an option.”

While Gabrielle Giffords stands up for Southern Arizona, her opponents’ commitment to rejected ideas and failed policies was absolute. Neither of them bothered to explain how current retirees’ benefits could be met under the privatization plan. With no new ideas of their own, they would take Southern Arizona backwards.

Click here to contribute $250, $150 or $50 today to help Gabrielle win in November and ensure that Southern Arizona keeps moving forward not backwards.

Giffords to introduce jobs bills for seniors

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

By Philip Franchine

Green Valley News

Older workers need congressional help in a tough economy, U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords said Monday as she explained two bills she is introducing.

The congresswoman acknowledged that the bills are unlikely to move toward passage this year because it is an election year, but said she wanted to get them into the legislative process now.

“In 2009, adults 55 and over made up almost 20 percent of the workforce, the highest percentage we’ve ever had,” Giffords said at the Pima Council On Aging in Tucson.

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