Senator pushes $1.5T fix as Social Security’s 2032 deadline closes

Spread the love

More than 70 million Americans face an automatic 22% cut to Social Security benefits in 2032 if Congress doesn’t act, and a bipartisan Senate proposal to address the shortfall has yet to be introduced as legislation.

U.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., who lost his primary reelection bid to a Trump-backed challenger in May, is pushing a proposal as a priority before he leaves office in January, but independent analysts say it fails to pay back its debt more than half the time.

Social Security’s trustees warned in a June 9 report that the program’s retirement trust fund will be depleted in 2032, one year earlier than projected last year.

At that point, the program would be able to pay 78% of scheduled benefits, triggering an automatic 22% cut for the Americans who rely on it, averaging $500 a month per beneficiary by 2032, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

The trustees attributed part of the deterioration to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed by President Donald Trump in July 2025, which reduced federal income tax rates in ways that lowered projected revenue to the trust funds.

Cassidy and Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., outlined the plan in a July 2025 Washington Post op-ed, proposing a new $1.5 trillion investment fund – separate from Social Security’s trust funds – to be invested in stocks, bonds and other assets for 75 years, with proceeds used to pay back the Treasury and offset the program’s long-term shortfall.

“There is a nationwide appetite to implement a bipartisan, commonsense plan like ours,” Cassidy and Kaine wrote. “Waiting until the Social Security Trust Fund is on the eve of crisis would have difficult and preventable consequences.”

Cassidy has said the proposal is modeled after the National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust, a diversified fund Congress created in 2001 that has consistently paid benefits on schedule.

A May analysis by the Boston College Center for Retirement Research, a retirement policy research center, found the plan unlikely to work. Running 10,000 simulations, researchers found the investment fund would fail to pay back all borrowing 64 out of 100 times under optimistic return assumptions. That dropped to 83 out of 100 times under more realistic projections.

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan fiscal watchdog, reached a similar conclusion in a March analysis, titling its findings “A Sovereign Debt Fund Can’t Save Social Security” and warning that significant new borrowing posed risks to bond markets already strained by the nation’s growing debt.

Romina Boccia, director of budget and entitlement policy at the Cato Institute, a nonprofit that advocates for limited government and fiscal restraint, said the proposal fails to address the underlying challenges.

“Senator Cassidy’s plan avoids politically difficult choices by ignoring the program’s structural problems, not by solving them,” Boccia told The Center Square. “It makes a $27 trillion leveraged bet with taxpayer money. The wager is very unlikely to pay off, and the most likely outcome is that taxpayers will pick up the losses.”

Cassidy pushed back on the independent analysis in a statement to The Center Square.

“The proposal has been shown to cover the majority of the shortfall,” Cassidy said. “Social Security is running out of money, and the longer we do nothing, the worse the outcome is for workers, retirees, and taxpayers. The plan would leave Congress with a much smaller gap to close than the full shortfall retirees face if Washington fails to act.”

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, who chairs the Senate Finance Committee and presided a Wednesday hearing on Social Security, said neither party’s standard approach is sufficient.

“This fiscal hole cannot realistically be plugged simply through tax hikes on the wealthy, that’s the Democrats’ favorite solution, or by cutting waste, fraud, and abuse, which is the Republicans’ favorite,” Grassley said.

Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., warned that Social Security’s insolvency and the nation’s growing debt burden could “come to roost at the same time.” Shai Akabas, a fiscal policy expert at the Bipartisan Policy Center, who testified at Wednesday’s hearing, agreed, saying any bridging mechanism must be paired with structural reform or it simply shifts the burden to future taxpayers.

“Bridging without reforming is not a solution,” Akabas said. “It is a more expensive version of the current problem, financed at the expense of future taxpayers.”

Cassidy finished third in the May primary with 24.8% of the vote, behind Rep. Julia Letlow and state Treasurer John Fleming, and is leaving the Senate in January. Following the trustees report, Cassidy joined Sens. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and Tim Kaine, D-Va., in a joint statement urging Congress to act. Three of the four senators who signed the statement – Cassidy, Tillis and Durbin – are leaving the chamber at the end of their terms.

Tillis said Social Security’s looming insolvency was a factor in his decision not to seek re-election.

“The reality that I would be running hard to then inherit an insolvency issue with Social Security was a real consideration for me,” he said at Wednesday’s hearing.

“If you knew how scared members of Congress of both political parties are of the issue of Social Security, you’d be laughing at us,” Grassley said.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Trump, Patel tout 'historic' crime crackdown

Trump, Patel tout ‘historic’ crime crackdown

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square The FBI has overseen the arrests of nearly 8,700 violent criminals as part of Operation Summer Heat, President Donald Trump and FBI Kash Patel said...
Illinois quick hits: Business optimism index declines; Medicare open enrollment help offered

Illinois quick hits: Business optimism index declines; Medicare open enrollment help offered

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Business optimism index declines The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index declined 2.0 points in September to 98.8, which remains just above...
WATCH: California seeks investigation into big tech merger

WATCH: California seeks investigation into big tech merger

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square California Attorney General Rob Bonta said Wednesday he was joining 12 other Democratic state attorneys general in intervening in a $14 billion merger between rival...

WATCH: IL legislator blames Pritzker, Johnson rhetoric for ‘bounties’ on ICE

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Federal law enforcement agents in Chicago conducting immigration enforcement are the targets of bounties from Mexican cartels,...
Voters concerned about prices amid tariff rollout, upcoming midterms

Voters concerned about prices amid tariff rollout, upcoming midterms

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square As President Donald Trump's tariffs go into force and midterm elections come into focus, voters are more concerned about how much things cost than about...
Supreme Court won't let lawmaker intervene in tariff challenge

Supreme Court won’t let lawmaker intervene in tariff challenge

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court denied a move from a Montana lawmaker seeking to intervene as the high court takes up a challenge to President Donald...

WATCH: Lawmakers differ on ‘affordability issues’ plaguing Illinois

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch says state lawmakers need to address the state’s affordability issues, but...
Senate GOP leaders switch tactics as govt funding bill fails for 9th time

Senate GOP leaders switch tactics as govt funding bill fails for 9th time

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square As Democrats in the Senate repeatedly tank Republicans’ bill to reopen and extend funding for the federal government, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., is...
Federal judge blocks Trump from firing employees during shutdown

Federal judge blocks Trump from firing employees during shutdown

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from firing employees during the partial government shutdown. U.S. District Judge Susan Illston, who is based in...
Colorado to receive $56.5 million for EV chargers

Colorado to receive $56.5 million for EV chargers

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Colorado has officially secured nearly $60 million in federal funding for electric vehicle chargers. The funding is part of the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Grant...

WATCH: Illinois transit agencies face ‘trust cliff’ along with fiscal cliff

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – State lawmakers are questioning transit agency leaders over their revised fiscal cliff numbers and spending of operational...
Illinois quick hits: Stallantis to invest in four states; DHS: Bounties put on ICE

Illinois quick hits: Stallantis to invest in four states; DHS: Bounties put on ICE

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Stallantis to invest in four states Stellantis has announced plans to expand its U.S. production by 50% with investments in Illinois,...
WATCH: DHS: cartel placing bounties on agents; prison mail scanned; House floor politics

WATCH: DHS: cartel placing bounties on agents; prison mail scanned; House floor politics

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop shares the latest...
Competition ‘evisceration’: SCOTUS asked to forever end Realtors’ ‘optional’ rules

Competition ‘evisceration’: SCOTUS asked to forever end Realtors’ ‘optional’ rules

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Amid a series of changes in the home selling business that have been called nothing short of seismic, the country's largest real...
Investigation: California brush clearance stalling 9 months after January fires

Investigation: California brush clearance stalling 9 months after January fires

By Kenneth SchruppThe Center Square California’s brush clearance efforts are stalling nine months after the devastating January fires that destroyed vast swathes of Los Angeles County, state data shows. Only...