In Op-Ed, Elizabeth Warren And Bernie Sanders Ask Who Congress Really Works For

Excerpts from a longer piece in The New York Times by Elizabeth Warren And Bernie Sanders

Over the past year, Republicans have made their priorities clear. Their effort to repeal Obamacare would have left tens of millions of people without health insurance. Now Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, wants to ram through an enormous tax giveaway to the wealthy before seating Doug Jones, Alabama’s newly elected Democratic senator.

The Republican agenda on health care and taxes may be popular with wealthy campaign donors, but it is widely disliked by the American people. It’s no wonder why. Despite a booming stock market and record corporate profits, workers in this country are being squeezed by flat wages, soaring household expenses and declining savings. They want Washington to start working for them and to spend tax dollars investing in our future – not bankrupting it.

With a government funding deadline looming on Friday, congressional Republicans face a choice. Will they spend this week just trying to deliver partisan tax breaks for the rich? Or will they work with Democrats to pass a budget that supports working people?

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At a time when the American economy is rigged in favor of the rich and giant corporations, the coming federal funding bill is a chance to show that our country still respects hard work. We recognize that we cannot do everything we’d like to do before the end of the year, but there is room in the budget to take real, immediate steps in this direction – by easing household costs for working parents and students, by protecting workers’ pensions and Social Security, and by improving access to health care for veterans and for people who need mental health services.

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Student loan debt is another major burden for many people, including those in lower-paying public service jobs, like teachers, nurses, firefighters, police officers, social workers and military personnel. Ten years ago, Congress created a program to help wipe out student loan debt for these public servants, hoping it would encourage more people to give back to their communities. But because of failures in student loan servicing and a lot of bureaucratic nonsense, many might not get the forgiveness they’ve earned. Congress can easily fix this in the funding bill and help tens of thousands of people.

To strengthen Americans’ economic security, it’s not enough to reduce basic expenses. We must also protect retirement – and that means pensions and Social Security. It was Wall Street greed that made our economy crash in 2008, not America’s truckers, warehouse workers, retirees and widows. But as a consequence of that crash, the pension funds of many workers are now on the brink of failure. Congress can use this funding bill to shore up these retirement plans and make sure nearly 1.5 million American workers aren’t left holding the bag for Wall Street’s mistakes.

For millions of others, Social Security is a lifeline in retirement. But many older people and Americans with disabilities are now struggling to get their benefits because budget cuts have forced the agency running Social Security to cut thousands of jobs and close 64 field offices since 2010. Congress should restore funding to the agency and help fill the gaps in service so that people can get the benefits they have earned.

This year’s debate over Obamacare was a powerful reminder about the enormous economic burden posed by health care in America. We must keep working to protect the availability of critical, affordable health care for families. This is a huge task, but there are a couple of specific, obvious ways we can make a difference right now in the federal budget.

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The task in front of Congress over the coming week boils down to a basic question: Does Washington work for all of us or just for those at the top? Congress has a chance, right now, to take steps that will make life a bit better for millions of working people immediately and in the years to come. We should seize it.

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3 thoughts on “In Op-Ed, Elizabeth Warren And Bernie Sanders Ask Who Congress Really Works For

  1. Liz and Bernie – if you didn’t know Congress works for the highest campaign bidder – you were probably also on that “ship” – that sailed so very long ago. Bush worked for big oil and the MIC, Obama had a contract with corporate healthcare/health ins. well before he was elected, and clearly Trump is working both for domestic and Russian real estate (and other asset) developers.

  2. Although my heart is with them, it’s the same song and dance. The single most important thing that can be done to return the government back to the people is election reform. Public financed elections, time to legislate and not grovel for dough 80% of the time. Maybe, just maybe, we could have actual debates of actual and relevant issues. Try to lobby, go directly to jail. Accept lobby money, ditto. Have a PAC, shut her down or you’re going to jail. One man, one vote (that includes the ladies too) is a true democracy and will end the oligarchy’s stranglehold on America.

  3. I’m sorry swearing an oath of office on the Bible doesn’t have any real meaning. Otherwise, all these bums on both sides of the aisle would be scared of the consequences of falsely swearing to uphold the Constitution and work for the good of all of us. Too bad a big thunderbolt isn’t going to come out of the blue and take care of all these selfish liars.

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