This morning, on FDR's 137th birthday, Ways and Means Social Security Subcommittee Chairman John Larson (D-CT) introduced the Social Security 2100 Act . The bill, which would be the most significant update to Social Security since 1983, is meant to increase benefits and strengthen the Trust Fund. There are 203 co-sponsors. Not a single Republican and several of the worst Democrats from the Republican wing of the Democratic Party have signed on. There are 235 Democrats in Congress. So who hasn't signed on? The first place I looked was at the Blue Dog membership list and then the New Dem membership list, since those groups are where you find Democrats who oppose working families in the same way that Republicans do. These are the names of the refuseniks I found-- first the Blue Dogs:

• Jim Cooper (Nashville, TN)

• Jim Costa (Fresno, CA)

• Charlie Crist (St. Petersburg, FL)

• Joe Cunningham (Charleston, SC)

• Josh Gottheimer (Bergen Co., NJ)

• Dan Lipinski (Chicago, IL)

• Stephanie Murphy (Orlando, FL)

• Tom O'Halleran (Sedona, Flagstaff, AZ)

• Anthony Brindisi (Utica, Binghampton, NY)

• Brad Schneider (North Shore Chicagoland, IL)

• Kurt Schrader (Willamette Valley, Salem, OR)

• Max Rose (Staten Island, Brooklyn, NY)

• Mikie Sherrill (Morris Co., NJ)

• Xochitl Torres Small (Las Cruces, NM)

• Jeff Van Drew (Atlantic City, NJ)

And these are the New Dems, although most of the Blue Dogs are also New Dems:

• Scott Peters (San Diego, CA)

• Colin Allred (Dallas, TX)

• Lizzie Fletcher (Houston, TX)

• Josh Harder (Modesto, CA)

• Ron Kind (Eau Claire, La Crosse, WI)

• Raja Krishamoorthi (Northwest Cook County, DuPage, IL)

• Susie Lee (southern Clark Co., NV)

• Elaine Luria (Virginia Beach, Norfolk, VA)

• Ben McAdams (Salt Lake suburbs, Provo, UT)

• Dean Phillips (west Minneapolis suburbs, MN)

• Elissa Slotkin (Lansing, MI)

We've been warning you about these garbage members of Congress. And now you see why. Alex Lawson, who runs SocialSecurityWorks, told us that "There are over two hundred original co-sponsors on this bill from every corner of the party, every caucus, every geographic area, every everything. We will welcome everybody on after introduction and we expect their votes when this comes to the floor in the spring. Anybody who votes against this bill is ignoring the overwhelming majority of Democrats and even the majority of Republicans who support increasing Social Security benefits. Anybody who votes against this bill is making it crystal clear they work for the billionaires and not the people."



I asked Eva Putzova, the progressive candidate for Congress in AZ-01 challenging Tom O’Halleran, an "ex"-Republican and she had strong feelings that differed greatly from his: "Strengthening our social security program is a no brainer. Nobody should live in poverty and certainly nobody who worked all their life should worry about where the money for food and other basics will come from." This is what they refuse to support:

• Benefit bump for current and new beneficiaries – Provides an increase for all beneficiaries that is the equivalent of 2% of the average benefit. The United States faces a retirement crisis and a modest boost in Social Security benefits strengthens the one leg of the retirement system that that is universal and the most reliable.



• Protection against inflation – Improves the annual cost of living adjustment (COLA) formula to better reflect the costs incurred by seniors through adopting a CPI-E formula. This provision will help seniors who spend a greater portion of their income on health care and other necessities. Improved inflation protection will especially help older retirees and widows who are more likely to rely on Social Security benefits as they age.]



• Protect low income workers – No one who paid into the system over a lifetime should retire into poverty. The new minimum benefit will be set at 25% above the poverty line and would be tied to wage levels to ensure that the minimum benefit does not fall behind.



• Cut taxes for beneficiaries – Over 12 million Social Security recipients would see a tax cut. Presently, your Social Security benefits are taxed if you have non-Social Security income exceeding $25,000 for an individual or $32,000 for couples. This would raise that threshold to $50,000 and $100,000 respectively.



• Holding SSI, Medicaid, and CHIP Beneficiaries Harmless – Ensures that any increase in benefits from the bill do not result in a reduction in SSI benefits or loss of eligibility for Medicaid or CHIP.



• Have millionaires and billionaires pay the same rate as everyone else – Presently, payroll taxes are not collected on wages over $132,900. This legislation would apply the payroll tax to wages above $400,000. This provision would only affect the top 0.4% of wage earners.



• 50 cents per week to keep the system solvent – Gradually phase in an increase in the contribution rate beginning in 2020 so that by 2043, workers and employers would pay 7.4% instead of 6.2% today. For the average worker this would mean paying an additional 50 cents per week every year to keep the system solvent.



• Social Security Trust Fund Established – Social Security provides all-in-one retirement, survivor, and disability benefits funded through the dedicated FICA contribution paid by workers. There are technically two trust funds, Old-Age and Survivors (OASI) and Disability Insurance (DI), and that are usually referred to as the Social Security Trust Fund. This provision combines the OASI & DI trust funds into one Social Security Trust Fund, to ensure that all benefits will be paid.

Natalie DeVito is a progressive activist and a friend of mine who lives on Staten Island. She took the news about Max Rose refusing to get behind Social Security badly. She e-mailed me this morning: