He concludes "we have an off-cycle electorate that assumes that they’ll be dead in 15 years, so let the good times roll."
I comment.
The argument makes sense, but the votes of US adults over 60 don’t. The Republican policy stance (except during campaigns) is the opposite of “let the good times role”. They fight for reduced deficits and, in particular, demand entitlement reform.
In particular, Arkansans over 60 voted for Tom Cotton who voted to raise the Medicare eligibility age to 70. This is a “death bet” only if to death they say “you betcha”.
Cotton’s vote is on a roll call and the Republican Study Group budget is public, so I think it is OK to link to a partisan source
http://pryorforsenate.com/cottonfunders/
“Cotton Was the Only Member Of The Arkansas Delegation To Vote for Republican Study Committee Budget That Transformed Medicare Into Voucher System, Raised the Eligibility Age For Medicare To 70 And Cut Social Security Benefits.”
One can not use rational self interest to explain why people aged over 60 vote for Republicans who demand that Democrats accept entitlement reform and then denounce the Democrats for accepting some of the Republican demands.
The Republican "entitlement reform" is always structured as a fuck the future recipients bet. It is structured as "If you're already on Social Security, if you are already on Medicare, you keep it. Hell, we'll throw more money at you by taking away the Medicare Advantage cuts... the nasty cuts are coming to the current population that is under 55 years of age, not the deserving old"
ReplyDeleteBeing 66 and voting Republican makes sense.