Chapter 15, week 8
Chapter fifteen deals with
politics, policies, and programs.
“Approximately ninety percent of Americans over age fifty are registered
to vote, compared with an overall national figure of less than seventy five
percent” (p.408). This gives the elderly
a large amount of power when they vote as a bloc. “In all recent elections; older people are
more likely to vote than younger ones” (p.408).
Their politics are fairly balanced between the Democratic and Republican
parties. The chapter mentions six
organizations that represents older people that are successful and growth. AARP which is “the premier lobbyist for
causes primarily impacting older people” (p.410). Not only is it nonprofit but it is also
nonpartisan. The National committee to
Preserve Social Security and Medicare is an organization that “is concerned
about the solvency of the Social Security Trust Funds” (p.411). Social Security and Medicare benefits are to
be protected and improved by the professional lobbyists that work for the
organization. The National Council of
Senior Citizens purpose is to push the government “to get things done on behalf
of the aged” (p.411). The National
Council on the Aging is headquartered in Washington, D.C., sponsors conferences
and seminars, publishes on the subject of aging; and funds different special
interest groups. The National Caucus and
Center on Black Aged is an organization that aims “improve the quality and
length of life for senior African Americans” (p.412). Equality and access issues are concerns of
this organization. The Gray Panthers is
a political group that strives to put “the needs of people over profit, responsibility
over power and democracy over institutions” (p.413).