As former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley earns praise from some corners of the GOP for her willingness to tackle the financial health of Social Security, former President Donald Trump is trying to punish her for it.
Itโs the latest example of how the GOPโs seesawing approach to the programโs looming solvency crisis is surfacing in this primary โ with the former president, who previously used the issue to attack Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, now trying to blunt Haleyโs momentum in the final days before voting begins.
Trumpโs campaign released a new ad on Thursday targeting his rival Republican over her plans to reform government retirement benefits. Haleyโs team shot back that the former presidentโs record undermines his claims that he is a champion ofย the popular entitlement program.
And the back-and-forth over Social Security isnโt reserved to the two leading candidates in New Hampshire. One of the most heated exchanges of Wednesday nightโs CNN debate between DeSantis and Haley in Iowa, where Trump has dominated polling, occurred when the discussion veered to Social Security.
Social Security has long been a thorny issue for presidential candidates, especially in general elections, when the two nominees are in a heated race to win over reliable senior voters. But for Republicans, Trumpโs arrival altered the dynamics of how the GOP talks about the program.
For decades, conservative budget hawks have attempted to tinker with it to keep it solvent. That changed in 2016, when Trump vowed to protect Social Security and Medicare, forcing Republicans to retreat from a bedrock position.
Conservatives have often expressed wariness of the program since it began in the 1930s. But as Americans have embraced Social Security โ 79% opposed reducing the size of benefits in anย AP-NORC pollย conducted in March โ opponents have changed…
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