To argue otherwise is to be either woefully uninformed or purposely resistant to reality.
1. He supported them in the first press conference:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/07/11/press-conference-president"And so, yeah, we’re going to have a sales job; this is not pleasant. It is hard to persuade people to do hard stuff that entails trimming benefits and increasing revenues. But the reason we’ve got a problem right now is people keep on avoiding hard things, and I think now is the time for us to go ahead and take it on."2. He supported them in the second press conference:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/07/15/press-conference-president"well, let me put it this way: If you’re a senior citizen, and a modification potentially costs you a hundred or two hundred bucks a year more, or even if it’s not affecting current beneficiaries, somebody who’s 40 today 20 years from now is going to end up having to pay a little bit more....The least I can do is to say that people who are making a million dollars or more have to do something as well." 3. He put 650 billion in cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security on the table and then publicly bemoaned the fact that the Republicans did not accept his "big deal." And we learned afterward that the "big deal" absolutely DID include benefit cuts. By reports from multiple sources (including Nancy Pelosi, btw), the deal,
which was agreed upon except for the revenue component, included the following:
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/23/what-obama-was-willing-to-give-away/?utm_source=Blog&utm_medium=twitterhttp://www.tnr.com/blog/jonathan-cohn/92539/obama-boehner-debt-ceiling-press-conference-concessions-revenue"Medicare: Raising the eligibility age, imposing higher premiums for upper income beneficiaries, changing the cost-sharing structure, and shifting Medigap insurance in ways that would likely reduce first-dollar coverage. This was to generate about $250 billion in ten-year savings. This was virtually identical to what Boehner offered.
Medicaid: Significant reductions in the federal contribution along with changes in taxes on providers, resulting in lower spending that would likely curb eligibility or benefits. This was to yield about $110 billion in savings. Boehner had sought more: About $140 billion. But that’s the kind of gap ongoing negotiation could close.
Social Security: Changing the formula for calculating cost-of-living increases in order to reduce future payouts. The idea was to close the long-term solvency gap by one-third, although it likely would have taken more than just this one reform to produce enough savings for that.
Discretionary spending: A cut in discretionary spending equal to $1.2 trillion over ten years, some of them coming in fiscal year 2012. The remaining differences here, over the timing of such cuts, were tiny."4. Now the Republicans have moved further right, and the President is *still* begging for a compromise. (
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/07/25/address-president-nation)
"...serious deficit reduction would still require us to tackle the tough challenges of entitlement and tax reform. Either way, I’ve told leaders of both parties that they must come up with a fair compromise in the next few days that can pass both houses of Congress -– and a compromise that I can sign. I’m confident we can reach this compromise. Despite our disagreements, Republican leaders and I have found common ground before. And I believe that enough members of both parties will ultimately put politics aside and help us make progress."Let me repeat: the President offered up these entitlement benefit cuts just last week. Now the Republicans have moved further right, and the President continues to plead for a "compromise." Not only that, but he insists that serious debt reduction must include "entitlement reform," and he references their ability to find common ground as they did before.
NEVER does he say that benefits cuts are off the table. All evidence screams that they remain on the table.
Only the willfully blind would insist at this point, with the history I have detailed here, that this "entitlement reform" will not include benefit cuts. In fact, Kucinich is on record today chastising the President for not being more forthright with the public about his planned cuts to Social Security. The above-mentioned cuts to Medicare and Medicaid are certainly also still on the table, as well.
5. Add to this the President's longstanding history of PLANNING significant entitlement reform and aligning himself with other Hamiltonian Democrats who have been very clear about wanting to slash the benefits system:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=439x15403156. And his promise to reform entitlements soon after he was elected President:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/15/AR2009011504114.htmlIn summary, it is important to read and watch what Obama and other Democrats are actually saying and doing. Nancy Pelosi, once considered one of the last, best hopes for true liberals wanting to defend the 95 percent of us who are not wealthy, has also announced that it is time for us to enter an era of "austerity."
If, after all of this, you don't think that includes benefit cuts, you are creating your own reality.