The Hill
•76% Informative
U.S. could def Social Security June 1, Treasury Secretary Janet Ye WASHINGTON
AP ocia Phoenix ity recip Saundra Cole s that receive state and federal subsidies and millions more are Washington ing the possibility of massive and immediate cuts.
A recent poll found 66% of Amer monthly r Social Security mely concerned about the impact on the economy.
People on fixed incomes and organizations that serve the p daily re bracing 94 degrees ntia May efault.
“It’s not how a healthy democracy handles its business,” he says.
“This is the stuff of partisan politics.” Adriene Clifford, 58, withdrew money from the bank “just to tie me over” She was concerned about the bank Cole system going down Washington DIC not being there. 2023 the Kids’ Stop Learning Center six to eight months millions gia Cartersville U.S. Feed_highLightText__NxlGi">Rome Treasury mmaryFeed_h Janet Yellen __NxlGi" last week pan> 1984millions an class="summaryFeed_highLightText__NxlGi">Lance Elam Social Security __NxlGi">Georgia Rome Americans yFeed_highLightText__NxlGi">U.S. the Federal Deposit Insurance the Census Bureau an cl 2020 " roughly 35% _hig U.S. htText__NxlGi">Clifford Social Security ed_highLigh 36% xt__NxlGi" Medicaid pan> more than 13% eed_highLightText__NxlGi">Delhi The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research Feed_highLig 66% ext_ Americans 8 Adriene C U.S. ord the 14th Amendment only 21% Robert Gault 63 an> 1,900 F monthly h Social Security i">coming years the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy William Howell
VR Score
78
Informative language
75
Neutral language
51
Article tone
informal
Language
English
Language complexity
57
Offensive language
not offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
short-lived
External references
10
Source diversity
3
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