Help Wanted: Overseers for Social Security and Medicare

FILE – In this May 21, 2018, file photo, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin talks with reporters about trade with China outside of the White House in Washington. Key posts overseeing the financial health of Social Security and Medicare have been vacant for more than three years, leaving the programs without independent accountability in the face of dire predictions about approaching insolvency.

Key posts overseeing financial health of Social Security and Medicare go unfilled as problems worsen.

WASHINGTON — Key posts overseeing the financial health of Social Security and Medicare have been vacant for more than three years.

That leaves the programs without independent accountability in the face of dire predictions about approaching insolvency.

These days Washington is corroded by partisanship and consumed by political crises. Gridlock has become the norm and hundreds of senior government positions remain unfilled.

For beneficiaries and taxpayers the lack of “public trustees” for Social Security and Medicare means a loss of outside supervision of bedrock middle-class programs.

Most Americans may not even realize there are such jobs as public trustees of Social Security and Medicare, but insiders say the special advisers help keep annual financial reports honest by acting as a check on the ever-present temptation for political appointees to tweak the numbers.

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