275,000 illegal invaders removed plus 12.4 million dead people wped from database.
WASHINGTON (PNN) - August 14, 2025 - On the 90th anniversary of the Social Security Act, President Donald J. Trump delivered a stirring proclamation in the Oval Office, promising to “Make Social Security Great Again.”
President Trump celebrated the passage of his signature legislation, the “One Big Beautiful Bill,” which includes a temporary senior tax deduction, effectively eliminating taxes on Social Security benefits for many recipients aged 65 and above from 2025 through 2028.
As part of the regime’s push to “root out fraud, waste and abuse,” President Trump touted removing 275,000 illegal aliens from the Social Security system and clearing 12.4 million names listed as being over 120 years old.
In his remarks and through a White House post, he said many of these phantom entries were receiving benefits.
“Last month, I signed one big, beautiful bill and allowed no tax on Social Security for our great seniors. Okay, so how’s that? Not bad, right? No tax on Social Security for our seniors,” said President Trump.
“To protect our benefits,” said President Trump, “we have already kicked nearly 275,000 illegal aliens off of the Social Security system. These are people - many of them have already left the country - and yet we were sending them checks all the time; and 275,000… that number is now even larger than that. It is an unbelievable job, and what that is doing is making the system strong. It is making it strong.”
“Biden never kicked anybody off. Everybody joined, and we are carrying out historic deportations to remove many more illegals committing Social Security fraud. It is the Social Security fraud that was taking place at levels that nobody has ever seen.
“We cleared 12.4 million names listed in the Social Security database over 120 years of age. Just think of that. We had 12.4 million names where they were over 120 years old. Is that right? That is a hell of a statement.
“You have 12.4 million names listed in the Social Security database that were over 120 years of age, meaning you were breaking records, because I have never heard of anybody at 125.
“There were nearly 135,000 people who were over 160 years old, and in some cases getting payments. Somebody is getting those payments, and we are after that.”
The regime took credit for significant enhancements in SSA customer service: handling 70% more calls, reducing average hold times from 30 minutes to just six minutes, and driving a surge in automated self-service options, serving 90% of calls via technology-based solutions.
Field office wait times dropped 23%, and appointment usage quintupled.