DISTRICTS OF THE HEART: No one cares about Social Security!

MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2026

Everyone cares about this: At the start of yesterday's Meet the Press, Steve Kornacki was introduced.

Kornacki is NBC's numbers man. Here's the first number he offered:    

WELKER (6/14/26): With the midterms less than five months away, our Chief Data Analyst Steve Kornacki, joins me now with the results of our latest NBC News poll. 

So we are within five months of the midterms. What are the big headlines?

KORNACKI: Yeah, Kristen. To start, just the bottom line on Trump’s standing with the voters right now. His approval rating sits at 42% in our NBC poll. Now, this is with registered voters. And that is down a tick. You can see the last time we checked in, early in the spring, he was at 44%.

WELKER: Is that a new low, Steve? 42%?

KORNACKI: That is the second term low in our poll for Donald Trump, falling to 42% right now.  

As you know, President Trump won't be on the ballot in the midterm elections. For that reason, we're often struck by our own Blue America's focus on his approval numbers.  

That said: 

As Blue Americans, we're routinely invited to marvel at how low his approval number is. At this site, we tend to have a different reaction:    

Given the persistent lunacy of the sitting president's behavior, we're amazed at how high his approval number is!    

The president won't be on the ballot this fall. Almost a thousand Republican and Democratic candidates will be.   

Will Democrats gain control of the House? Could they take control of the Senate? Kornacki moved to a second set of numbers:  

[continuing from above
KORNACKI: And the other thing that this dovetails with of course is the generic congressional battle with the Democrats now. As you said, inside of five months to the midterm, a five-point lead for the Democrats here.

Now obviously, that’s a strong number for them. What the Republicans would say on this is: If you think back to Trump’s first term, that blue wave of 2018, this number was more at, like, eight to ten points. So Republicans hoping to contain the damage at least looking at a number like that.  

On the screen, it was Democrats 49%, Republicans 44%! Just so you'll know, here's the question in the NBC News poll which produced those numbers:   

Q25: What is your preference for the outcome of this year’s congressional elections–(ROTATE) a Congress controlled by Republicans or a Congress controlled by Democrats?   

By a five-point margin, more people said they'd prefer a Congress controlled by Democrats. 

Does a number like that tend to have solid predictive value? Back in 2021, Larry Sabato's Center for Politics offered this assessment:   

MOSKOWITZ (2/11/21): Since 1968, the generic ballot has missed the real House popular vote by an average of 4%, and until 2008, it consistently overestimated Democratic support. Pollsters have mostly fixed both of these problems, and the generic ballot has been more accurate and balanced since the mid-aughts.

You'd rather be five points ahead on the generic ballot! But especially in the face of the mid-census redistricting war which President Trump kicked off, we'd say a five-point advantage in that arena may be less reassuring that it has recently been. 

(Also, there's no way to know what kind of election will be allowed to take place this year, given the "win at all costs" mentality of the strongman / royalist White House.)

That brings us back to our amazementour amazement at the fact that the sitting president's approvals remain as high as they currently are.   

Given his unrelenting strange behavior, it's striking to us that President Trump can still boast something like 42 percent approval. We often find ourselves gnashing our teeth at the possibility that our own behaviors here in Blue America may help him keep his numbers that high.   

With that, we return to what we regard as the most interesting (and most painful) issue of the day. We refer to the Supreme Court's recent decisions concerning the Voting Rights Actmore precisely, concerning the kinds of congressional districting which are, and are not, permitted according to the Constitution and under terms of that Act.  

People, consider this:

According to the most recent Naep testing, America's younger public school kids may be on the way back! Here's the start of the recent report in the New York Times:   

Younger Students’ Test Scores Bounce Back After the Pandemic

The nation’s 9-year-olds, who were in preschool when the pandemic hit, have made a significant recovery in reading since 2022, and are now caught up to where 9-year-olds were immediately before the pandemic, according to a key federal exam. They are getting closer to being caught up in math.

In theory, that's important newsbut it will, of course, produce exactly zero discussion. You'll see it mentioned nowhere else. The truth is, nobody cares.

Then too, consider the recent guest essay by Jason Furman, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers under President Obama (2013 - 2017). Headline included, his essay started like this:  

I Worked in the White House. We Never Imagined This Problem Would Get This Bad.

The first major public policy issue I worked on in the White House, almost 30 years ago, was President Bill Clinton’s call to “save Social Security first.” Though the fund wasn’t projected to run dry for another three decades, the country seemed gripped by the issue...

This week the Social Security trustees announced that the trust fund for retirees and survivors will be exhausted in just six years. That’s six years before tens of millions of Americans could see their benefits cut by 22 percent. The crisis is closer than anyone in the Clinton or Bush years ever imagined we might let it get. 

Here's the June 9 news report in the New York Times about that announcement. Here too, you're going to see little or no discussion, whether of this matter or of the giant budget deficits the sitting president keeps expanding with his silly but high-profile tax cuts, 

(No tax on tips? Why not?)  

At present, major topics come and go, with barely a single word said. These topics get swallowed up by all The Crazy from the White Housethe buildings torn down, the shrines renamed, and the UFC fights out on the lawn, with some ugly name-calling thrown in. (See this afternoon's report.)

That said, the Supreme Court's decisions involving the Voting Rights Act have produced a great deal of reaction within Blue America. That has happened for reasons which are perfectly understandable and perfectly obviousbut are those of us in Blue America possibly responding in an unhelpful way?   

Our nation's brutal racial history lies at the heart of the ongoing discussions this topic. For better or worse, so does this iconic statement by the later Wittgenstein:    

For philosophical problems arise when language goes on holiday.   

Wittgenstein was speaking there about the "problems" which constituted much of 20th century academic philosophy. He thought those "philosophical problems" were largely illusorywere the result of familiar locutions being air-lifted into contexts where no one knows what they mean, with the resulting incomprehension going undetected. 

The history which underlies the debate about the VRA is brutally, painfully real. There's nothing illusory about such matters at all.

That said, language has often gone on holiday in our attempts to discuss this topic, and it seems to us that some of Blue America's reactions are the sorts of reactions which help the current president stay at 42 percent.  

Professor Brabender, the great anthropologist, insightfully had it right. Famously, he described the impulses of us the humans in the manner shown:   

Where I come from, we only talk so long. After that, we start to hit.   

That tends to be true of us the humans. It can even sometimes be true of us the Blues.

Centuries of brutality underlie this Voting Rights issue. Those endless brutalities really occurred. That doesn't necessarily mean that we're currently getting it right.

Tomorrow: We agree, and we may not agree, with what Terri Sewell said


44 comments:

  1. Somerby has totally phoned it in today. He has cut-and-pasted his favorite gripes into a single incoherent essay that says nothing at all. This is the kind of stream-of-consciousness meandering that Trump typically offers now whenever he gives a speech. Somerby and Trump are nearly the same age, so perhaps they both suffer from the same malady of old age.

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    1. Agreed. Somerby kinda sounds like another dumb ass trolling lefties here. We shouldn't be interested in the President's approval?, it has no impact on midterms? WTF?

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  2. Somerby quotes from the NY Times, then says no one cares about an issue, then proceeds not to discuss it himself. Meanwhile, he says we blues are responsible for bad stuff, several times, so consistently that one must conclude that blaming us blues is the main point of his essay. Nothing else gets mentioned twice.

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  3. Our problems these days, under a weirdly out-of-control Trump administration, are not based on language. They are not illusory and cannot be fixed by placing philosophy on a non-linguistic basis (or whatever Somerby thinks Wittgenstein did to actually solve philosophy -- hint: he did nothing at all). Our problems in the USA are real. We Democrats are seeking real solutions to them.

    Somerby thinks Trump is using the UFC to distract us from NAEP scores, which are returning to pre-covid normal (and thus not exactly a problem, right?). That's because Somerby has not and will not ever discuss the Epstein files, wealth inequality, screw worms, or anything else that is actually threatening our nation. I'm surprised he didn't quote Yevtushenko again today. No time is uninteresting.

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  4. First Somerby says that it doesn't matter if the president is at 42% because he isn't running again. Then Somerby blames the Dems for keeping Trump's approval rating so high (except it is actually very low and getting worse).

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  5. "We agree, and we may not agree, with what Terri Sewell said"

    Somerby has promised this for tomorrow, but he lies about such things routinely. Will he tell us a few more times that she is very sharp? Will he bother to tell us what she actually said, before telling us that he either agrees or disagrees with her? Will anyone care? We know blues don't care about anything Somerby thinks we should, and we know that no one will talk about anything Somerby wants to hear about, except the NY Times, which is where he gets his actual info (certainly not from Fox) but then he has to pretend that no one ELSE is talking about anything real, amirite? But will anyone talk about Sewell again, since she apparently said something more than a week ago that Somerby hasn't gotten around to talking about himself, thus behaving more like a blue than he might care to admit. But remember, he hasn't talked about Sewell yet, and may not do so this week either.

    How did Sewell get mixed up in Somerby's fever dreams? Why does she deserve to be someone he fantasizes about but cannot bring himself to discuss? Does anyone care?

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    1. Sewell is a centrist open to capitulating to Republicans, Somerby operates under the delusion that citing centrists will afford him some credibility as he attacks Dems.

      Somerby says he both agrees and disagrees with Sewell.

      Somerby is a clown.

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  6. Somerby says that no one cares about Social Security. That is untrue. Democrats have immediately addressed this issue in Congress, where the GOP is once again attacking Social Security benefits. For example:

    "Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., is calling on the Trump administration to clarify its stance on raising the retirement age — a move she said she opposes.

    In a new letter sent to President Donald Trump on Sunday night, Warren cited details from the Social Security Administration’s latest trustees report. In late 2032 — just a bit more than six years from now — the trust fund Social Security relies on to pay retirement benefits will run out, according to new projections in the report. At that time, 78% of those benefits will be payable if lawmakers take no action.

    “Republicans have a history of attempting to increase the retirement age, privatize Social Security, or otherwise cut Social Security benefits, and some Congressional Republicans have called to raise the retirement age or means-test benefits as the ‘solution’ to this problem,” Warren wrote with Democratic Sens. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut.

    Changes to the Social Security age thresholds would be tantamount to a benefit cut, experts have said.

    It “hurts older Americans, cutting monthly benefits and forcing millions into poverty,” the lawmakers wrote.

    The White House did not respond to a request for comment on the letter.

    Asked last week about the administration’s plans for the program, including perhaps raising the retirement age, White House spokesperson Liz Huston told CNBC in an email that, “President Trump will always protect and strengthen Social Security.”"

    It is unclear why Somerby ignores the immediate, strong response by Democrats in order to say that no one cares about this issue, which is very important to both seniors and working people.

    It is a right wing talking point that Democrats don't care about such issues when Democrats are the only party trying to preserve and expand Social Security benefits while placing the program on a sound financial basis. The GOP wants to cut benefits and even eliminate the elements of our national safety net (including Medicare).

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    1. SS is easily solved by raising or eliminating the cap (taxable maximum) on taxable income.

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    2. Think that solves about 2/3rds of the shortfall. Plus it is totally unfair to expect multi-millionaires to pay taxes at the same rate as minimum wage earners. You must be one of those dirty commie types.

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    3. @12:42 - Sorry, fixing SS is not that easy. Raising the cap pushes doomsday back a few years. It doesn't solve the problem. In the long run, the ratio of people paying in to people collecting is below 3 and trending toward 2 to 1. That means that in order to pay me $60,000 per year, the average working person will have to contribute $30,000. That's not economically feasible.

      The only "solution" would be to essentially end SS and replace it with a less generous welfare program - one that gave money only to poor people. That's obviously a non-starter.

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    4. @12:47 - your snark would be appropriate if SS were not presented as insurance, rather than welfare. It's an annuity. With annuities, the more you pay in, the more you get back. Today, high earners do pay in a fair amount-- fair in the sense that their contributions match their benefits.

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    5. Idiot David. If it was a real annuity it would not have a shortfall. Our politicians have taken the money out. Top 0.1% have 40% of the countries wealth, bottom 50% have 3% of the wealth. Do the maths you sick ass troll.

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    6. Sorry but research and studies show that fixing is that easy.

      The worker/retiree ratio is already accommodated in the system.

      Gen X is smaller than the Baby Boomer generation, but Millennials and Gen Z are larger than Gen X, so the worker/retiree ratio issue is not that impactful and is temporary.

      There has been a dramatic decline in SS taxable earnings as a percent of overall earnings from 92% down to 82%.

      If that number returns to 92% that closes most of the funding gap, if it is raised to 100% it closes the gap.

      Less immigrant workers also harms SS since they pay into it but generally do not get any benefits, they contribute about $100B each year to SS, with about $20-25B from undocumented immigrants.

      Worker participation has been decreasing in recent years.

      Employers have been systematically reclassifying their workers as independent contractors, thereby relieving employers of having to pay their share of SS/FICA taxes.

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    7. Also too, undocumented pay payroll taxes but don't qualify for benefits. Of course the Felon is fucking that up by forcing them out.

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    8. @6:37 - It seems in consistent to call Trump a "felon" and simultaneously blame him for not going along with felonious activities.

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  7. Michelle Obama is a man.

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  8. Trump agrees to surrender in a war he started, along with additionally offering giving Iran $300 billion.

    Brilliant negotiating with himself!

    Total humiliation for the US.

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    1. Wait, Trump started a war with Iran for no reason and now wants to end it by giving Iran more than what it had before the war?

      Are Trump and his voters demented, or just really stupid?

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    2. Plus they want to add $500 Billion to the bloated defense budget to help them to keep their tradition of losing wars. Pretty clear that these masters of manipulating their debt are intent on collapsing the dollar.

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    3. On the plus side the nukes still need to be figured out (idiot tore up a very fine nuke treaty in 2016) and Iran is empowered to fuck with the global economy by droning the straight and get what they want at anytime. So much fucking winning, and the odds are 50/1 this "deal" goes to shit for the 51st time.

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    4. Amazingly Iran offered Trump a better deal than even the JCPOA in some respects shortly before Trump started attacking Iran, but Trump's negotiators - Vance, Kushner, and Witkoff - were too stupid to know what was going on.

      This admin is clueless when it comes to the needs of Americans, but they excel at exploiting disasters (like Trump's Iran War) for personal gain.

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  9. "WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Taking his milestone birthday in stride, on Sunday Donald J. Trump told reporters, “I may be eighty, but I have the brain of a four-year-old.”

    “People who think I’m too old should take a look at this UFC fight,” he argued. “That’s an idea that could only come from a four-year-old’s mind.”

    Trump said his self-assessment was corroborated by doctors at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, who told him at his most recent exam that his cognition had scored at a four-year-old level."

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  10. Just in case Somerby is upset about the lack of coverage of the UFC cage matches last night:

    https://www.wonkette.com/p/oiled-up-half-naked-men-entertain

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    1. AP's fawning coverage is particularly disgusting.

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  11. Somerby clearly doesn't care about White House corruption, but Jeff Tiedrich does:

    "MS Now: “right now let’s take a look at some of the ads appearing on the White House lawn. there is beer, crypto, nicotine pouch ads, and they’re all inside the claw there. and you took issue at the branding at the event and UFC’s broadcast partner Paramount Skydance, so what are your concerns about the branding?”

    Brendan Ballou: “ultimately, we have any number of laws that are trying to prevent our national parks and national monuments being used for for-profit, corrupt endeavors, which is exactly what’s going on here. the UFC, which is very closely allied to Donald Trump, stands to make a lot of money from it’s branding, not to mention the 1.5 million dollar individual sponsorship packages that it’s selling. Donald Trump stands to make a lot of money through the stock that he has invested in the UFC’s Paramount company… this is a literalization of the corruption we’re experiencing in America right now, where you literally have sponsorships that the president and his friends are going to benefit from at our national monuments.”

    corporate logos slapped all over our government, that shit’s literally out of Idiocracy...

    ...oh how great. not only are these violent dipshits getting imaginary money whose only use is paying for crimes, it’s being done so in a way that personally profits Dear Leader — because of course it does.

    everything is a grift with this gonif.

    it’s cheap, it’s crass, and it’s downright un-American.

    in the 1970s, Jimmy Carter had to sell his peanut farm just so there wouldn’t be any appearance of impropriety. fifty years later, all that shit’s out the window. we’ve normalized greed and corruption. Donny turns everything into one more opportunity to enrich himself off the powers of his office, and the cowards in Congress and the worthless scribblers of the corporate-controlled press just stand around like the useless lumps they are.

    Idiocracy. it’s what’s for breakfast."

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    1. forget about President Carter;, what about Hillary Clinton forced to resign from the Clinton Foundation, a fucking global charity:

      Yes, Hillary Clinton stepped down from the Clinton Foundation Board of Directors in April 2015 as she prepared to launch her presidential campaign. She did this to prevent potential conflicts of interest during her presidential run and to avoid the appearance of unethical overlap between the charity and her political career. Later, in August 2016, former President Bill Clinton promised that he would also resign from the foundation's board and halt all fundraising should she win the presidency.

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  12. Quaker in a BasementJune 15, 2026 at 12:15 PM

    The New York Times reported last week that Trump's team gathered in the White House situation room to discuss how to cover up his role in Jeffrey Epstein's crimes.

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    1. And how to use Joe Rogan as a useful idiot to whitewash Trump’s corruption and crimes.

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    2. The times has also done some decent reporting on Trump’s corruption. But, alas, i don’t believe they ascribed either that or the Epstein coverup to a mental illness that should be pitied. Fancy that.

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    3. If you’re still watching/listening to Joe Rogan, you’re not just a dupe, you’re part of the problem.

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    4. They could drag out the Iran fiasco for only so long.

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  13. Due in part to Dem strategy and actions, Trump is the least popular president in history.

    Somerby, citing the higher end of Trump’s polling (most reputable polls have Trump in the mid to low 30s), says he’s bummed Trump is so popular.

    Brother, please.

    This bizarre take of Somerby’s is not too dissimilar from his wild stance on racism, pushing the notion that in today’s world racism is “largely illusory”.

    Somerby is out of touch and out to lunch.

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  14. Brabender was a pro baseball pitcher in the 60s and 70s, known for being a gentle giant (he cried when he accidentally hit a batter with a pitch).

    If Brabender’s quote is accurate, which is not likely considering the source, he would have been referring to hitting balls - a reference to Midwest work ethic, not to violent tendencies.

    Somerby trots out this misuse of the quote when he is feeling particularly frustrated his right wing agenda of finger wagging at liberals is gaining no traction; it’s a tell that points to Somerby’s spitefulness and his own recognition at how ineffectual he is.

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  15. The Metcalf dad released an insane and racist rant recently, including calling Anthony a “watermelon felon”.

    This pretty much guarantees Anthony will have a strong appeal and Anthony’s family will have a strong civil case against the Metcalfs.

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    1. If Republicans were consistent and not racist hypocrites, they would support Anthony being acquitted - same as Zimmerman, Rittenhouse, Penny, etc.

      But in reality Republicans value their lack of integrity as a feature, not a bug. It is something they pride themselves on.

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  16. The Democratic party is actually less popular than Trump.

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  17. Dems poll higher than Republicans.

    To the extent Dems are unpopular it is primarily because they are not progressive enough, whereas Republicans are unpopular for being too far right.

    Dems having been outperforming since 2018, they have flipped about 20 seats since Trump was reelected, with Republicans not flipping any.

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  18. People have been pointing to recent polls that say Democrats are viewed more negatively than Trump. Here's one from a couple of weeks ago. But the more important issue is that a majority of people are dissatisfied with "both sides". They don't like Republicans, but see Democrats as ineffective, weak assholes

    https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/29/polls/dissatisfied-voters.html

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  19. Polls show that Dems are expected to take back the House, and possibly the Senate.

    Republicans misunderstand why Dems are unpopular, amusingly Republicans think that means they themselves are more popular but in reality Dems are unpopular for being in essence Republican-lite.

    Americans want Dems to be progressive and view Dems as weak when they are too similar to Republicans - pro corporation, pro tax cuts for the rich, pro wars.

    Republicans are unpopular because they are out of touch loons and have gone too far right.

    Trump is the least popular president in history.

    Since Trump was reelected, Dems keep flipping Republican seats.

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  20. Polls say people think the Democratic Party doesn't address everyday concerns of voters.

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