Republicans divided on whether to make 2016 about punishing seniors
Paul Ryan's ascendancy to the speaker's chair and the presidential nomination fight have brought Social Security and Medicare to the forefront for 2016. Now, Republicans are "openly feuding," according to Robert Costa and Ed O'Keefe, two of the best watchers of the GOP. That, they say, risks "a potentially damaging intra-party battle ahead of the 2016 elections."
The rift was exemplified this week by the GOP stars of the moment. Newly installed House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) said he plans to pursue a "bold alternative agenda" that would include major revisions in en lements. At the same time, leading Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump railed against proposals to end or significantly change Medicare.The dispute is part of a larger GOP argument over which policies Republicans will present to voters next year and how far the party should go in pushing for changes. Three years ago, GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney and Ryan, his running mate, faced withering Democratic attacks after endorsing dramatic overhauls of Medicare and Social Security that proved unpopular. […]
"This is the biggest fault line in the party: whether Republicans should be talking about reducing benefits," conservative economist Stephen Moore said in an interview. "Republicans have fallen on their sword for 30 years trying to reform Social Security and Medicare, but the dream lives on—and it makes everyone nervous. Some see a political trap; others see it as necessary."
"how many times do Democrats have to run ads of Granny getting pushed off of a cliff in order for Republicans to see that making this their main issue isn’t politically practical?"
There's no chance that the rest of the GOP—including Ryan—backs down from this crusade in 2016 or anytime after.
http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2015/11/5/1445064/-Republicans-divided-on-whether-to-make-2016-about-punishing-seniors