- Feb 6, 2002
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By that I mean his political aspirations. He has three problems here.
1. SS and Medicare are highly sucessful and popular programs. He is the first one I've heard suggest they are unconstitutional
2. Old people vote
3. The interviewer caught him in his one sided interpretation of the constitution. Which shows he hasen't given it much thought other them how to use it to push his agenda.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) has, to say the least, a very odd understanding of the Constitution. He thinks Texas should be able to opt out of Social Security, and he believes that everything from federal public school programs to clean air laws are unconstitutional. Yet in an interview with the Daily Beasts Andrew Romano, Perry makes his most outlandish claim to date Social Security and Medicare are unconstitutional:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/08/12/rick-perry-newsweek-interview-transcript.html
Perrys reading of the Constitution raises very serious questions about whether he understands the English language. The Constitution gives Congress the power to to lay and collect taxes and to provide for the general welfare of the United States. No plausible interpretation of the words general welfare does not include programs that ensure that all Americans can live their entire lives secure in the understanding that retirement will not force them into poverty and untreated sickness.
Moreover, Perrys belief that Social Security and Medicare must cease to exist not only puts him well to the right of his fellow Republicans in Congress who recently voted to gradually phase out Medicare it also puts him at the rightward fringe of the GOP presidential field. Not even Michele Bachmann has gone on record claiming that Americas two most cherished programs for seniors violate the Constitution, although she did invite a Fox News analyst who shares Perrys beliefs to lecture her fellow lawmakers on what the Constitution requires.
1. SS and Medicare are highly sucessful and popular programs. He is the first one I've heard suggest they are unconstitutional
2. Old people vote
3. The interviewer caught him in his one sided interpretation of the constitution. Which shows he hasen't given it much thought other them how to use it to push his agenda.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) has, to say the least, a very odd understanding of the Constitution. He thinks Texas should be able to opt out of Social Security, and he believes that everything from federal public school programs to clean air laws are unconstitutional. Yet in an interview with the Daily Beasts Andrew Romano, Perry makes his most outlandish claim to date Social Security and Medicare are unconstitutional:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/08/12/rick-perry-newsweek-interview-transcript.html
The Constitution says that the Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes to provide for the general Welfare of the United States. But I noticed that when you quoted this section on page 116, you left general welfare out and put an ellipsis in its place. Progressives would say that general welfare includes things like Social Security or Medicarethat it gives the government the flexibility to tackle more than just the basic responsibilities laid out explicitly in our founding document. What does general welfare mean to you?
[PERRY:] I dont think our founding fathers when they were putting the term general welfare in there were thinking about a federally operated program of pensions nor a federally operated program of health care. What they clearly said was that those were issues that the states need to address. Not the federal government. I stand very clear on that. From my perspective, the states could substantially better operate those programs if thats what those states decided to do.
So in your view those things fall outside of general welfare. But what falls inside of it? What did the Founders mean by general welfare?
[PERRY:] I dont know if Im going to sit here and parse down to what the Founding Fathers thought general welfare meant.
But you just said what you thought they didnt mean by general welfare. So isnt it fair to ask what they did mean? Its in the Constitution.
[Silence.]
Perrys reading of the Constitution raises very serious questions about whether he understands the English language. The Constitution gives Congress the power to to lay and collect taxes and to provide for the general welfare of the United States. No plausible interpretation of the words general welfare does not include programs that ensure that all Americans can live their entire lives secure in the understanding that retirement will not force them into poverty and untreated sickness.
Moreover, Perrys belief that Social Security and Medicare must cease to exist not only puts him well to the right of his fellow Republicans in Congress who recently voted to gradually phase out Medicare it also puts him at the rightward fringe of the GOP presidential field. Not even Michele Bachmann has gone on record claiming that Americas two most cherished programs for seniors violate the Constitution, although she did invite a Fox News analyst who shares Perrys beliefs to lecture her fellow lawmakers on what the Constitution requires.