Trump Social Security chief accused of 'quietly killing' services

Trump Social Security chief accused of 'quietly killing' services
Social Security Cards and Money (Shutterstock)

The Trump administration is reportedly looking to dramatically reduce the number of people who visit Social Security field offices across the United States, a plan that Democratic lawmakers warned is yet another scheme to disrupt and ultimately cut benefits.

Nextgov/FCW viewed internal Social Security Administration (SSA) planning documents showing that the agency is aiming for “no more than 15 million total” in-person visits to field offices in fiscal year 2026—half the level of the prior fiscal year.“Under Social Security Commissioner Frank Bisignano, the agency is aiming to push people to interact with Social Security online instead of going to a field office or calling the agency, although Bisignano told lawmakers in June that, even with his focus on technology, the agency is not ‘getting rid of field offices,’ despite reports of planned closures,” Nextgov/FCW reported Monday.

One anonymous SSA staffer told the outlet that agency leadership wants “fewer people in the front door and they want all work that doesn’t require direct customer interactions to be centralized.”

“They appear to be quietly killing field offices,” the staffer said.

The plan comes after the Trump administration carried out the largest staffing cut in SSA history, cutting the agency’s workforce by around 7,000. The cut left one SSA worker for every 1,480 beneficiaries, resulting in understaffed field offices and overwhelmed phone operations.

Beneficiaries have also repeatedly faced issues this year attempting to access the Social Security website, problems that SSA’s plan to curb field office visits could exacerbate.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), one of the lawmakers spearheading a probe into Bisignano’s questionable tenure at the fintech company Fiserv, said in response to the new reporting that “this sure sounds like another way to make it even harder for Americans to get the benefits they’ve earned.”

In a social media post on Monday, Warren highlighted testimony from seniors who have faced long wait times and other difficulties while seeking assistance from SSA under Bisignano’s leadership.

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, told Nextgov/FCW that “between staffing reductions, more restrictive documentation requirements for Americans to get assistance on the phones, and rapid reorganization of offices around the country, it’s difficult to see how” SSA’s goal of slashing visits to field offices “will lead to anything other than worse service and more challenges at Social Security.”

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A Republican senator's proposal to overhaul U.S. citizenship could force President Donald Trump's wife and youngest son into a tight spot.

Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-OH) intends to introduce legislation that would end dual citizenship by requiring American citizens to declare their “exclusive allegiance” to the U.S. and renounce their foreign citizenship, as the Trump-endorsed senator did for his own Colombian citizenship, reported The Daily Beast.

“One of the greatest honors of my life was when I became an American citizen at 18, the first opportunity I could do so,” the Colombian-born Moreno told Fox News Digital.

“It was an honor to pledge an Oath of Allegiance to the United States of America and only to the United States of America,” Moreno added. “Being an American citizen is an honor and a privilege — and if you want to be an American, it’s all or nothing. It’s time to end dual citizenship for good.”

Moreno's proposal could create a headache for the first lady and Barron Trump, who remain dual citizens of the U.S. and Slovenia after Melania filed paperwork at some point ensuring her son would also have citizenship in her birth country.

“She did that to give her son options,” said Washington Post reporter Mary Jordan, who published a book on Melania Trump last year titled "The Art of Her Deal." “If you have a Slovenian citizenship, which Barron is entitled to, the passport makes a lot of things easier."

“I think she also likes that he speaks Slovenian, he has a Slovenian passport," Jordan added. "By getting him the citizenship and the passport it’s easier for him to get a job, it’s easier for him to set up a business, it’s easier for him to inherit land. It’s mama bear just giving options to her son.”

Born in 1970 in Slovenia, Melania Trump is only the second first lady born outside the United States, after President John Quincy Adams's wife Louisa Adams, who was born in London in 1775.

She is the only first lady to become a naturalized U.S. citizen and obtained her citizenship in July 2006 on an EB-1 visa, which is reserved for immigrants with “extraordinary ability” and “sustained national and international acclaim.”

The Exclusive Citizenship Act of 2025 proposed by Moreno would be enforced by the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security and would set up a system to track dual citizens, who would then have a year to renounce their foreign citizenship, or forfeit their U.S. citizenship.

Anyone who failed to comply within that year would automatically lose their U.S. citizenship, and anyone who gave up their U.S. citizenship would be considered foreigners and recorded as non-citizens.

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A GOP strategist believes the midterm elections will see a "discontented" public turn out to vote.

With the failings of the Trump administration splitting the GOP and the Democrats capitalising on those same shortcomings, it appears polling numbers may have put a little fear in the Republican party. An anonymous strategist told The Hill that the slate of problems the GOP is now dealing with will affect how people decide to vote this time next year.

They said, "I think, and we’re still a year out, what these numbers look like is a ‘throw the bums out’ election. If everyone is discontented with both parties, there’s going to be an anti-incumbency sentiment."

Other strategists believe the Republican party has a fight on their hands in a series of elections taking place in Red states. Whether they flip back to the Dems in the midterms is yet to be seen, but some are "seriously concerned" about the GOP's chances.

Lower polling numbers than expected for the GOP and candidates who are, according to insiders, not taking their races seriously, are worrying Republicans running election campaigns this year.

Democrats are aware of their higher polling figures, and while it may not lead to any immediate victories, it could mean a lot for the state of the midterms.

Democrat House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said, "Democrats have been over-performing the 2024 Trump numbers since the very beginning of his presidency, starting in late January in Iowa, where we flipped a district that Donald Trump had just won."

It's not just Democrats who are feeling the effect of polling numbers, with Donald Trump's figures dropping to some of the lowest numbers the president has ever seen across his two terms in office.

Jordan King wrote, "As of Wednesday morning, Trump currently has an average disapproval rating of 55 percent, while 41 percent approve, according to The New York Times' polling aggregator."

"A new poll by J.L. Partners, conducted between November 19 and 20 on 1,244 registered voters, found that 49 percent disapproved of Trump, while 41 percent approved. The poll had a margin of error of +/- 3.2 percent. The pollster's previous poll, conducted in mid-October, showed Trump with a 46 percent approval rating."

Comments made by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth at a highly-publicized — and criticized — gathering at Quantico at the end of September may come back to haunt him as lawmakers announce hearings into possible war crimes by Donald Trump’s appointee to head up the Pentagon.

During Hegseth’s appearance, that was notable about his complaining about “fat” military personnel, he also made it clear he did not feel soldiers should be constrained from doing their jobs as he saw them.

On Tuesday morning, the co-hosts of “Morning Joe" resurfaced a clip from Hegseth’s rant that likely will be used against him when hearings are held.

In the video, an animated and pacing Hegseth boasted, “We're training warriors, not defenders. We fight wars to win, not to defend. We also don't fight with stupid rules of engagement. We untie the hands of our warfighters to intimidate, demoralize, hunt and kill the enemies of our country.”

“No more politically correct and overbearing rules of engagement, just common sense. Maximum lethality and authority for warfighters,” he ranted.

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