TPMDC

Rep. Steve King Prefers Bush Approach To Ryan Budget Plan (VIDEO)

Spread the word. Share this article on Facebook!

Share

Rep. Steve King (R-IA)

Share

Twitter Fark Reddit Send to a Friend

Send to a friend!

To email:    Your Name:    Your email:

Rep. Steve King said Republicans ought to present more specific entitlement reforms in their budget plans and supports privatizing Social Security as outlined by President George W. Bush in 2005.

At CPAC last week, we tracked down Republicans to get their take on Rep. Paul Ryan's budget "roadmap" plan which cuts Social Security and creates a voucher system for Medicare. His office declined to comment to us earlier this month, but King said in an interview with TPMDC he has some different ideas for entitlement reform.

King (R-IA) said he wants to fully read the Ryan proposal before taking a yes or no, but said he likes the Bush Social Security plan that many other Republicans now shy away from since it was so politically untenable that year and factored into the Democratic takeover in 2006.

"People should be able to control their own retirement destiny," King said.

On Medicare, he wants to expand health savings accounts and believes "personal responsibility" is key to reforming the program.

King is on the far right of the caucus, and spoke frankly when we asked his thoughts on the official budget plan GOP leadership will present next month.

"I find myself quite often not being willing to sign on to the Republican alternative. Usually those things are put together with several hand-picked people that go in and they write a bill. And that's real nice if you don't have the confidence to analyze a policy or construct it yourself," he said.

Watch:


Rep. Darrell Issa took a different stance when we interviewed him, saying he would co-sponsor Ryan's budget and adding he thinks Bush's plan went in the wrong direction.

Former Republican leader Dick Armey (R-TX) told TPMDC the Ryan plan is "courageous" and that the GOP should embrace it.

We're going to keep asking. If you hear Republicans in your Congressional district talking about Social Security and Medicare, please let us know.

Comments (7) | Join the Conversation!

Recommend Recommend (0)

February 22, 2010 12:45 PM   

If we wanted any proof the Republicans are feeling cocky, this is it. I thought they wouldn't try going after Social Security and Medicare for another decade after Bush's effort failed so miserably in 2005, starting "the year from hell" that was just the first of several lousy years in a row for them. They wouldn't be going on about privatization again if they didn't feel sure they were looking at a huge win this year. What a great way of losing all those seniors they misled into yelling at their congressmen.

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

February 22, 2010 12:49 PM   

People can control their own retirement destiny, now. There's nothing stopping them from saving in IRAs, 401ks, or just their own, personal retirement savings. It can be invested in stocks, bonds, or bedbugs for all I care, the choice is theirs. Social Security is a safety net program, not a government sponsored personal pension plan. It should be controlled by the government, and invested for some growth, but with safety as the primary concern. Don't mess with it. How would you like to be the retiree who desperately needed it when the market took a nose dive? The only ones who would benefit from privatization are the investment companies, and those who don't need it, and could afford to lose it in a gamble that didn't pay off. The rest of us can't.

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

February 22, 2010 1:08 PM    in reply to acf_ma

To add to your summary of personal retirement investment vehicles. They add a manner of chance to your retirement planning, as in will my retirement date be a few months before a major market collapse or after. As we learned (again) in 2008 the market can drop 40% in a few weeks.

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

February 22, 2010 2:06 PM   

If King or other privateers are concerned about the national debt, piling on a few trillion dollars in transition costs isn't going to help.

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

February 22, 2010 4:22 PM   

I think this is a wonderful idea and Republicans should be going out and trumpeting this to every media outlet. Town halls all across the country. Let the voters know what you stand for. Don't forget to include your boffo plans for Medicare. That should ensure electoral victory in November.

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

February 23, 2010 7:41 AM    in reply to mans_best_friend

Dude, I'm sorry, but you're waaaaaaaaay overestimating the intelligence of the average RepuKKKe voter. They have a huge bias: Everything repuKKKes do, is to be trusted, and everything Obama does is a govt take over commie plan.
Since this goes against their religion of govt=baaaaaaaaaad they will vote themselves poor. They will be poor, but happy having made rich man richer.

I used to wonder when will they ever wake up, but now I know they won't. They wouldn't feel safe, knowing we all should stick together. They WANT neo-feudalism: Super gated communities, all the way baby!

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

February 23, 2010 11:26 AM   

please help prevent steve king (R-IA) from getting re-elected. please become a fan of "Steve King, US Representative from Iowa's 5th District, is a Nincompoop" at http://facebook.com/stevekingnincompoop

Reply | Flag Abuse

Are you sure this comment violates TPM's Terms of Service?

Leave a comment

Your response:

Follow us!

Most Popular

TPM Stories Now Surging on