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Search resuls for: "Bill Hoagland"


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Washington lawmakers are scrambling to pass a spending bill before an Oct. 1 deadline. For retirees who rely on Social Security and Medicare, the good news is those programs will mostly be unaffected because they are considered mandatory spending. "Checks will continue to go out," Bill Sweeney, senior vice president of government affairs at AARP, said of Social Security benefits. "Most seniors should be fine, both on the Medicare side and on the Social Security side," said Maria Freese, senior legislative representative at the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare. If a shutdown happens this time around, it may be brief, according to Bill Hoagland, senior vice president at the Bipartisan Policy Center.
Persons: Bill Sweeney, Maria Freese, Freese, Bill Hoagland Organizations: U.S . Capitol, Social Security, AARP, Finance, National Committee, Preserve Social Security, Center Locations: Washington ,, Washington
Advocates for a bipartisan commission argue the approach may help smooth out the differences between the parties. But whether a bipartisan commission is the answer to Social Security's funding woes is the subject of fierce debate. Social Security benefit cuts unpopular, poll showszimmytws | iStock | Getty ImagesA new poll from Social Security Works and Data for Progress of 1,191 likely voters highlights one big concern about that approach — that it would require benefit cuts. 'It has to be done in a bipartisan way'Any changes to Social Security will require bipartisan agreement. "You don't want Social Security to become a partisan issue," said Bill Hoagland, senior vice president at the Bipartisan Policy Center.
Persons: Tom Cole, Jake LaTurner, Cole, Danielle Deiseroth, Nancy Altman, Altman, Bill Hoagland, Hoagland Organizations: Istock, Getty, Social Security Commission, Democrats, Social Security, iStock, Progress, actuaries, Greenspan, Center Locations: Kansas
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