Thursday, October 13, 2022

MORE PEACE-OF-MIND? ...Hellooooo! Not even close!

 Associated Press 

Social security recipients to get 8.7% boost in benefits – highest in 40 years



Historic increase means average recipient will receive over $140 extra a month along with a 3% drop in Medicare Part B premiums

Millions of social security recipients will get an 8.7% boost in their benefits in 2023.

That’s a historic increase and welcome news for American retirees and others but it is tempered by the fact that it is fueled by record high inflation that has raised the cost of everyday living.

The cost-of living adjustment means the average recipient will receive more than $140 extra a month beginning in January, according to estimates released on Thursday by the Social Security Administration.

The boost in benefits will be coupled with a 3% drop in Medicare Part B premiums, meaning retirees will get the full impact of the jump in social security benefits.

The Social Security Administration’s acting commissioner, Kilolo Kijakazi, said combined with Medicare premiums going down in 2023, the social security benefit increase “will give seniors more peace of mind and breathing room”.

“This year’s substantial social security cost-of-living adjustment is the first time in over a decade that Medicare premiums are not rising and shows that we can provide more support to older Americans who count on the benefits they have earned,” she said.

The increase is the largest in 40 years, is fueled by record high inflation and is meant to help cover the higher cost of food, fuel and other goods and services. How well it does that depends on inflation next year.

The announcement comes just weeks before the midterm elections, and at a time when Democrats and Republicans are sparring about high prices now and how best to shore up the program financially in the future.

Joe Biden has pledged to protect both social security and Medicare. “I’ll make them stronger,” the president said last month. “And I’ll lower your cost to be able to keep them.”

About 70 million people – including retirees, disabled people and children – receive social security benefits. This will be the biggest increase in benefits that baby boomers, those born between the years 1946 and 1964, have ever seen.

Willie Clark, 65, of Waukegan, Illinois, says his budget is “real tight” and the increase in his social security disability benefits could give him some breathing room to cover the cost of the household expenses he has been holding off on.

Still, he doubts how much of the extra money will end up in his pocket. His rent in an apartment building subsidized by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development is based on his income, so he expects that will rise, too.

Social security is financed by payroll taxes collected from workers and their employers. Each pays 6.2% on wages up to a cap, which is adjusted each year for inflation. The maximum amount of earnings subject to social security payroll taxes for 2023 is $155,100.

The financing setup dates to the 1930s, the brainchild of President Franklin D Roosevelt, who believed a payroll tax would foster among average Americans a sense of ownership that would protect the program from political interference.

Next year’s higher payout, without an accompanying increase in social security contributions, could put additional pressure on a system that is facing a severe shortfall in coming years.

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FORMER FOX10 NEWS-READER KARI LAKE FRUSTRATED: Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs Refuses to Share a Stage with A Conspiracy Theorist

Putting together a televised question and answer session is the commission’s normal practice when only one candidate agrees to participate in a debate. 


“This decision is disappointing, especially following the multiple attempts on behalf of all the partners involved in producing this year’s General Election debates, to organize a traditional Gubernatorial debate between the two candidates,” the commission said in a statement on Wednesday. . .


INSERT Ted Simons

Arizona PBS

Moderating Debates for: US Senate,
Governor, Secretary of State,
Attorney General, Treasurer,
Superintendent of Public Instruction,
Corporation Commissioner




LAST SUNDAY "Face The Nation" 

4 days ago — Kari Lake | Katie Hobbs. On Sunday morning, Arizona's gubernatorial nominees appeared on “Face the Nation” to discuss issues facing voters


https://www.cbsnews.com/news/kate-hobbs-arizona-face-the-nation-transcript-10-09-2022/

Transcript: Katie Hobbs, Arizona gubernatorial candidate, on "Face the Nation, Oct. 9, 2022

5 hours ago — Arizona PBS gave Hobbs an interview despite her refusal to debate. That prompted the cancellation of Lake's Q&A.
4 days ago — The race is between Kari Lake, who has denied the results of the 2020 election, and Katie Hobbs, who was secretary of state at the time.

More debate drama: Lake Q&A postponed, Hobbs to get her own interview

BY:  - OCTOBER 12, 2022 4:35 PM

"A televised question and answer session with Republican Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake was postponed Wednesday, the same day it was set to air, after news broke that Arizona PBS had agreed to separately interview Lake’s Democratic opponent Secretary of State Katie Hobbs. 

The Arizona Clean Elections Commission, which has worked for years with its partner PBS to put together and televise debates between candidates for public office, had previously refused the Hobbs campaign’s request for separate interviews of the two candidates, to replace a traditional debate. The commission announced that it was postponing the Lake interview after learning of PBS’s plans to interview Hobbs. 

“We just learned hours before airtime of tonight’s Clean Elections Commission debate that PBS has unilaterally caved to Katie Hobbs’ demands and bailed her out from the consequences of her cowardly decision to avoid debating me on stage,” Lake said in a statement

. . .Hobbs’ campaign previously said she was not willing to share a debate stage with Lake because “you can’t debate a conspiracy theorist,” adding that Lake “only wants a spectacle. . .

Lake is a Trump-endorsed 2020 Election denier who has hounded the Hobbs campaign, continually calling her a chicken, since Hobbs announced she wasn’t willing to debate. 

After the Hobbs campaign asked the commission in September for separate interviews of the candidates, commission members voted 3-1 to deny her request, but gave her campaign a week to negotiate 

✓ Lake said that PBS’s decision to go behind the commission’s back to schedule an interview with Hobbs showed obvious bias. 

“PBS, a supposedly-objective taxpayer-funded entity, is working overtime to help elect Katie Hobbs, who needs all the help she can get,” Lake said. 

✓ Around 14% of Arizona PBS funding comes from federal grants, the rest of its money coming from things like memberships and donations.

Neither the commission nor Arizona PBS immediately responded to requests for comment."