Bush 'open to ideas' on Soc. Security

By The Associated Press


CANTON, Miss. -- President Bush pitched his newly remodeled Social Security solvency plan to blue-collar workers Tuesday as the White House signaled that he wasn't wedded to a particular formula for reducing promised future benefits.

Bush's plan, which would allow benefits to rise the most for lower-income retirees, has drawn widespread Democratic and some Republican criticism since he unveiled it last Thursday at a prime-time news conference.

In his auto-plant speech, the president called the new indexing proposal an attempt "to help people come up with the solution" to Social Security's solvency problems. He said it would help the neediest retirees. "That makes sense to me. I hope it makes sense to the U.S. Congress," Bush said.

Earlier, White House spokesman Trent Duffy told reporters aboard Air Force One that the president wasn't troubled that the indexing plan had drawn some GOP criticism and said that he was "open to all ideas."

Bush spoke to about 2,000 workers at the sprawling, nonunion Nissan North America plant.

In the past, Bush mainly emphasized his proposal to let workers under age 55 divert a portion of their Social Security payroll taxes into private investment accounts.

He promoted the personal account plan again in Tuesday's speech.

Bowing to criticism that such private accounts would do little to fix Social Security's finances, Bush is now focusing his energy on an overhaul in which initial benefits would rise the most for low-income workers.

Proponents of the indexing plan say it would erase about 70 percent of Social Security's long-term deficit. Critics argue that the slower growth in benefits would fall hardest on middle-income Americans.

"I believe I have a duty as your president to talk about the problem and propose a solution," Bush said.

The president was angling to regain lost political momentum and reverse a slide in the polls. In addition to failing to build public support for his personal-accounts plan, Bush has been hurt by rising gasoline prices, turmoil over his nomination of John Bolton to be U.N. ambassador, the ethics problems of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, and backlash over involvement by the president and Congress in the Terri Schaivo tube-feeding case.

Under Bush's revised plan, low-income workers would continue to have their benefits linked to the growth of wages, as now. The wealthiest seniors would have their initial benefits tied to price inflation, which usually rises more slowly than wages. For everyone in between, initial benefits would be figured by a sliding scale between price indexing and wage indexing. The White House has not said what income levels would trigger which benefit increases.

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