http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3626796/As we wrote on Friday, Bush's once earnest campaign to add private accounts to Social Security has dissipated, and he's spending more time touting the energy bill, the highway bill, and CAFTA as his big domestic achievements. In a perfunctory written statement yesterday marking the program's anniversary, he said "we renew our commitment to save and strengthen Social Security for our children and grandchildren, and keep the promise of Social Security for future generations." Beyond the reference to solvency, there was no mention of his desired private accounts. Legislatively, the likely scenario is that a bill passes the House this fall, stalls in the busy and more resistant Senate, and isn't brought up again up during the midterm election year.
In September, the White House is expected to turn its attention away from Social Security and onto tax reform, an issue which may inspire greater GOP unity and thus improve odds for passage. Still, some of the same questions that have come up during Bush's Social Security campaign can be raised about that effort, including
how to pay for the reforms (especially any effort to eliminate the alternative minimum tax), and
how actively Americans want them. Most polls today show health care and other economic issues like wages and gas prices topping the public's priority list.
Blows to one or both halves of Bush's hoped-for legacy won't necessarily translate into election-year successes for Democrats. The party never unified persuasively behind an alternative Social Security proposal of their own. They are also still gingerly, though with increasing confidence in the face of Bush's poll standing, picking their way around the issue of Iraq as Republicans pounce on any criticism as evidence that Democrats are weak on defense. DNC chair Howard Dean declared yesterday that women "will be worse off in Iraq than they were when Saddam Hussein was president of Iraq;" the RNC responded that Dean's "wild assertion... is not only counterproductive to meaningful debate, it demeans the hard work of American servicemen and women...”
The President currently has no public events planned for this week. NBC's Kelly O'Donnell reports that anti-war activist
Cindy Sheehan, who lost her son in Iraq, has changed her approach in her effort to meet with President Bush: she is now inviting him to join her and the others gathered at her campsite for a moment of silence and prayer for the troops at 1:00 pm ET on Friday.