White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Friday responded to Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., after Scott amended his "Rescue America" plan to specifically exempt Social Security and Medicare from a proposal to sunset all federal legislation every five years.

For months, President Biden has relentlessly attacked Republicans, waving around a proposal from Scott to require Congress to reauthorize all federal legislation every five years to keep those programs and eliminate unnecessary ones. The White House has repeatedly suggested Scott's idea would threaten Social Security and Medicare.

Fed-up with the Democratic attacks, Scott announced in an op-ed Friday that he has amended his proposal with "specific exceptions for Social Security, Medicare, national security, veterans’ benefits, and other essential services." 

UNDER ATTACK FROM BIDEN, RICK SCOTT AMENDS ‘RESCUE AMERICA’ PLAN TO EXEMPT SOCIAL SECURITY, MEDICARE

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Friday that Florida Sen. Rick Scott's amended "Rescue America" plan shows he had always intended to cut Social Security and Medicare.  (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Asked if Scott's amended plan put an end to the conversation on Social Security and Medicare spending, Jean-Pierre took a victory lap over his concessions. 

"The president congratulates Senator Scott on joining the post-State of the Union red wave, as we have seen from Republicans acknowledging that they [have], in fact, been attempting to put Medicare and Social Security on the chopping block," she said. 

MCCONNELL DISTANCES GOP FROM RICK SCOTT AS BIDEN STEPS UP SOCIAL SECURITY, MEDICARE ATTACKS ON GOP

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., has amended his 12-point plan to "Rescue America" after Democrats and some Republicans said he wanted to cut Social Security and Medicare.  (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Jean-Pierre claimed the fact that Scott felt he needed to add specific exceptions to his plan showed that in the original draft it would have endangered those programs.

"The past year, he has explained the absence of an exception by saying if it's worth keeping, we're going to keep it. But make no mistake, his true colors are undeniable," she said.

Jean-Pierre went on to accuse Republicans of "speaking at both sides of their mouths" and said it has been a "longstanding passion" of Scott and other GOP lawmakers to cut Social Security and Medicare. 

REP. TENNEY INTRODUCES RESOLUTION TO REASSURE AMERICANS THE GOP WILL  PROTECT SOCIAL SECURITY

A person covers their Social Security number with their thumb

A Social Security card. At current spending levels, Medicare's Hospital Insurance trust fund will go bankrupt by 2033 and Social Security will be insolvent by 2032.  (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)

Republicans have forcefully pushed back on these attacks. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., disavowed Scott's plan and has said Republican leadership agrees Social Security and Medicare "are not to be touched." 

In his op-ed, Scott wrote that the "inconvenient truth" is that "Medicare and Social Security are going bankrupt" and demanded that Biden put forward his plan to protect those programs from insolvency. 

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"President Joe Biden’s failure to address the imminent insolvency of entitlement programs reveals his ultimate plan: massive tax increases to fund his liberal wish list and new Medicare and Social Security taxes — the largest tax increases on America’s seniors in history," Scott charged. 

"One more inconvenient truth: Washington Republicans are as responsible for the massive increase in our national debt as Joe Biden and the Democrats," he continued. "Too many Republicans have caved to the Democrats too many times, and the result is a $32 trillion bill that’s about to come due."