Social Security: Red staters don't like the reforms. Could this be Bush's wedge issue?
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The lukewarm reception to Bush's plan among folks who would seem to be natural allies illustrates a deep problem for the White House's Social Security initiative. Social Security privatization is shaping up to be something of a wedge issue within the Republican Party -- a proposal that may split the ranks of business-friendly conservatives from those most interested in such "family values" issues as abortion and gay marriage -- which could prove costly to the party at the polls.
People in red states, particularly social conservatives, aren't clamoring for privatization. Although there have been no definitive, large-scale state-by-state surveys on Social Security, a handful of scattered red-state surveys show the president's proposal faltering in usually friendly territory. Such numbers aren't surprising, since red states are disproportionately made up of older, poorer Americans, people who greatly benefit from Social Security in its current form and don't want to see it monkeyed with.
More:
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2005/02/25/sellout/index.htmlThis is confirmed by my own experience at my red state republican representative's townhall yesterday. NOBODY seemed to think privitization was a good idea.