The media largely missed an AP poll in which Social Security beat joblessness as the top economic issue for  the coming election. For the 3rd Rail of Politics to work, the voter base has to have a large segment of people who aren't affected by the impact of their vote.  This is what the poll means, and why now. 
This piece originally appeared on American Thinker.
For the last  80 years, politicians have said just enough about the program to get  elected, and then done as little as possible to get re-elected. That  strategy works.
Hillary Clinton  is the personification of this political tactic.  She will tell  you what she won’t do, while telling you nothing about what she will  do.  She has promised to consider asking  high-wage earners to contribute more, but can’t tell you what she  will do when they say “no”.  She has said that Social Security  is unfair, but can’t tell supporters what changes she believes are  necessary to make the program fair to those ‘unfairly treated by the  system’.
Voters Will Be Affected This Time
The politics  of blah-blah-blah thrived in the past on a dedicated supply of indifference  in the voter base. The political calculus served older voters who expected  to be dead long before the consequences of their votes arrived. As recently  as 2009, that audience included about 50 percent of voting aged Americans.  The policies also drew support from a younger audience possessed with  the misguided idea that Social Security is an unquestioned expense which  keeps seniors from starving in the streets.
This political  ploy will face demographic challenges as current voters realize that  reforming Social Security will affect them personally. In their  most recent report, the Trustees of the program’s Trust Funds reported  that the system has about a coin flip chance for paying full benefits  into 2034.  That means that people turning 49 this year expect  to retire the year that the Trust Fund is exhausted.  That is roughly  50 percent of voting aged Americans.  
The trend is that more people will follow the issue.  Every day, 10,000 Boomers reach normal retirement age.   About half of the people turning 68 this year reasonably expect to be  alive in 2034. They will worry  less about the job that they don’t have, and more about the meal ticket  on which they depend.
The Demographics of younger workers
The finances  of Social Security are also unravelling much faster than the public  generally understands.  Since 2009, the cost to keep Social Security  ‘solvent’ has quadrupled according to Andrew Biggs, AEI’s policy expert for Social Security.   The system now accrues unfunded liabilities faster than it collects  revenue.  In other words, every penny of benefit paid in 2016 comes  at the projected expense of a future retiree.
The younger  audience present an even larger problem for politicians depending upon  a docile electorate. When I was a kid, children were raised by people  who truly believed that Social Security was the greatest accomplishment  of government. Now kids are raised by people who call it a Ponzi scheme.  That dynamic will not improve as politicians ask these parents to work  until 70 in order to preserve the system for political convenience.
Political Uncertainty none of these people have a plan 
Unfortunately  for polite politics, Bernie Sanders is agitating his base with  a plan. It is a crazy plan, one which would divert $11 trillion from  debt control to expand and extend Social Security. His incremental spending  is largely directed to wealthier seniors. His promise to preserve Social  Security for 50 years is the essentially cost to make the Boomers problem  a larger problem for Millennials. 
The GOP on the other hand is largely committed to  preserving benefits for current voters, but these politicians haven’t  said what taxes it will raise in order to fulfill its promise. What  little benefit reductions that they support, largely do nothing.   The GOP is offering one benefit reduction in order to replace the one  that will be forced by insolvency anyway.
Comically enough,  some people believe that demographics will insulate Social Security  from economic gravity as the finances of the program unravel.   The reality is that demographics will doom Social Security politically  long before they can financially.
 
 
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