WASHINGTON, June 15, 2026, 08:01 EDT
- The Social Security retirement trust fund is projected to run dry by late 2032. At that time, incoming revenue would pay for 78% of scheduled benefits.
- Speaker Mike Johnson brought up the idea of “adjusting” large benefit programs, pushing the trust-fund warning further up the political agenda.
- A U.S. Senate proposal with support from both parties to borrow funds and put them into stocks is under pressure, as researchers question whether investment gains would be enough to pay back what is borrowed.
Social Security is back under scrutiny after trustees said in their latest report that the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance trust fund could run out of money in the fourth quarter of 2032, moving up the estimate by a quarter from last year. If Congress fails to act, incoming revenue at that point would cover just 78% of the benefits owed to retirees and survivors. The same report says that if the retirement and disability trust funds are combined, the fund would last until the third quarter of 2034, but could only pay out 83% of scheduled benefits. Social Security
Political fights flared as House Speaker Mike Johnson said on a Louisiana radio show he wants changes to mandatory spending programs like Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. “We have a plan to do that next year. And it’s critical,” Johnson said on air. Johnson later said he wasn’t talking about cutting benefits for retirees and accused Democrats of fearmongering, saying his focus was on going after waste, fraud, and improper payments. People.com
Democratic senators hit back June 14. Elizabeth Warren, Tammy Duckworth, and Richard Blumenthal sent a letter to President Trump asking if the administration actually has a plan for Social Security solvency. The letter also presses Trump to clarify his stance on raising the retirement age, and if he would veto any bill that lifts the eligibility age. The senators want answers by June 29, citing Johnson’s “plan” for next year. Elizabeth Warren’s Senate Website Opinion writers are weighing in too. The New York Times’ Jason Furman says, “Instead of fixing the problem, America is likely to just kick it down the road again.” Bluesky Social
Cassidy-Kaine Social Security Plan Gets Another Look as Analysts Warn on Funding Gap The Cassidy-Kaine plan is up for discussion again. Senators Bill Cassidy and Tim Kaine are pitching a bipartisan idea to borrow $1.5 trillion for a big fund, with plans to invest in stocks and other higher-risk assets for 75 years. But the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College says that falls way short. Their analysts say it would actually take $25.1 trillion more to fill the Social Security hole on this timeline, bringing the total needed to $26.6 trillion. In a report, Anqi Chen, Alicia H. Munnell and Jean-Pierre Aubry wrote, “the gamble does not always pay off,” and modeled that with a 6.5% real return, the fund comes up short in 64 out of 100 scenarios. Center for Retirement Research
Fortune called the move a workaround for tax and benefit fights in Congress. Trustees said acting sooner gives Congress more choices and helps spread out changes over time. They point to that piece, beyond the headlines. Social Security doesn’t vanish in 2032. But if Congress doesn’t act, monthly benefits fall and there’s less room to ease the cut—measured in election cycles, not decades. fortune.com