Like other ConWeb outlets, Newsmax did what it could to defend Republicans against the (accurate) claim President Biden made during his State of the Union address that some Republicans want to cut Social Security and Medicare. First, though, there was a dismissive prebuttal in the form of a Feb. 6 article by Jay Clemons: “Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich already has begun criticizing President Joe Biden’s upcoming State of the Union address, predicting it will be a ‘very boring’ speech, highlighted by a number of ‘untruths’ designed to get Democratic Party members of the House and Senate ‘desperately cheering.'”
When the speech turned out not only to be not boring but also featured Biden calling out Republicans for their desire to cut Social Security and Medicare, Newsmax sprung into defense mode. Charlie McCarthy had a roundup of Republicans attacking the speech, including far-right Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene calling Biden a “liar” for making that claim. Then it was time for Newsmax to have a parade of Republicans attacking the claim (despite the fact that numerous Republicans are on the record as expressing their desire to cut Social Security and Medicare):
- Rep. Fallon to Newsmax: Biden Speech ‘the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly’
- Rep. Greene: ‘Not Sorry One Bit’ for Yelling ‘Liar’ During Biden’s Speech
- Rep. Collins to Newsmax: Biden’s Social Security Claims ‘Outright Falsehood’
- Rep. Biggs to Newsmax: Biden a ‘Big, Fat Liar’ With SOTU Claims
Newsmax’s columnists whined about this as well. Michael Dorstewitz denounced the claim in his Feb. 8 column: “This is a common claim made by Democrats. But it’s unfounded for one simple reason — it would be disastrous to the party.” Larry Bell complained in his Feb. 10 column:
Republicans booed and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene shouted “liar” when Joe falsely stated that some among them proposed to “sunset” Medicare and Social Security.
He was apparently disingenuously referring to Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla. who only suggested that all federal legislation be subject to renewal every five years in order to “fix” and “preserve” those social programs so that they are financially solvent for the long term.
A Feb. 10 article by Charles Kim served as Scott’s PR guy, helping him clean up the mess that Biden called out:
Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., introduced his bill Friday to strengthen Social Security and Medicare after President Joe Biden accused him of trying to cut the entitlement programs during his State of the Union speech on Tuesday.
“I have been fighting since Day One to protect and preserve programs like Social Security and Medicare for Florida’s seniors, and today I am proud to announce new legislation, my Protect Our Seniors Act, to safeguard the benefits of these critical entitlements,” Scott said in a press release Friday.
[…]Republicans attending the speech on the House floor of the U.S. Capitol heckled Biden, calling him a liar for the accusation.
Scott said Friday that his bill would rescind funding for 87,000 new Internal Revenue Service agents approved earlier this year in the Inflation Reduction Act, and redirect to funds to strengthen the programs for seniors.’
By Feb. 13, however — a week after the speech — Newsmax was adding qualifiers to those attacks, tacitly admitting Biden was right: “Sen. Mike Rounds: ‘Vast Majority’ of Republicans Don’t Want to Sunset Social Security.” A Feb. 17 article by the apparently unironically named Charlie McCarthy, meanwhile, documented more Scott backpedaling:
Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., updated his Rescue America plan to exclude Social Security, Medicare, and the U.S. Navy from his proposal to sunset all federal legislation in five years.
Scott’s changes come after his sunset proposal was blasted by President Joe Biden, Democrats, and some Republicans.
[…]Scott wrote that his sunset proposal “was obviously not intended to include entitlement programs such as Medicare and Social Security — programs that hard-working people have paid into their entire lives — or the funds dedicated to our national security.
“I have never supported cutting Social Security or Medicare, ever. To say otherwise is a disingenuous Democrat lie from a very confused president. And Sen. Mitch McConnell is also well aware of that. It’s shallow ‘gotcha’ politics, which is what Washington does.”
Scott further said that Americans outside of Washington knew what he intended when he first released his Rescue America plan.
Living up to his name, McCarthy served only as a shill for Scott and avoided mentioning the obvious point that Scott would never had bothered to amend his plan if it was actually true that “Americans outside of Washington knew what he intended.” Newsmax followed this with an anonymously written article noting that the Biden White House was making fun of Scott for amending his plan.
Biden’s strategy was so successful, however, that a Feb. 20 article by Theodore Bunker highlighted Republicans trying to fight the claim:
Republicans are looking to push back against claims by Democrats that the GOP is looking to cut Social Security and Medicare, the Washington Examiner reports.
President Joe Biden said in his State of the Union address that some Republicans want to put those programs “on the chopping block,” a claim that some are hoping to counter.
[…]Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., hit out at critics in an opinion piece released on Friday rejecting claims made by critics that his plan to sunset federal programs after five years unless extended by Congress is an attempt to cut Social Security and Medicare.
“I have never supported cutting Social Security or Medicare, ever.” he wrote. “To say otherwise is a disingenuous Democratic lie from a very confused president.”
Bunker didn’t mention that Scott’s plan to sunset all federal programs was the impetus for Biden claiming that Republicans want to cut Social Security and Medicare.