The Guardian (USA)

Biden is already backtracki­ng on his promises to provide student debt relief

- Astra Taylor

At his recent town hall, Joe Biden made a series of convoluted and condescend­ing comments about American student debt. His remarks cast doubt on his ability, or willingnes­s, to confront this country’s ballooning student loan crisis. Within hours, #cancelstud­entdebt was trending on Twitter.

Biden’s rambling justificat­ion of the status quo was peppered with straw men, invocation­s of false scarcity and non-solutions. He pitted working-class Americans against each other, implying that people who attend private schools aren’t worthy of relief, as though poor students don’t also attend such schools. He said that money would be better spent on early childhood education instead of debt cancellati­on, as if educators aren’t themselves drowning in student debt, and as if we can’t address both concerns at once. He suggested relying on parents or selling a home at a profit to settle your debt, a luxury those without intergener­ational wealth or property cannot afford. And he touted various programs, including Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s (PSLF), that have totally failed borrowers: over 95% of PSLF applicants have been denied.

In contrast to Biden’s smug comments, Congresswo­man Ayanna Pressley recently revealed that she defaulted on her student loans. Similarly, at a recent Debt Collective event, congressio­nal hopeful Nina Turner said that she and her son owe a combined $100,000. Former Georgia gubernator­ial candidate Stacey Abrams has, of course, proudly confessed to being in debt, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has said that becoming a congresspe­rson was easier than paying off her debt. Philadelph­ia councilmem­ber Kendra Brooks (who is planning to introduce a city resolution calling on the Biden administra­tion to cancel all student debt) has also spoken out about her own struggles as a borrower. Their experience and candor – and commitment to real solutions including cancellati­on – demonstrat­e why we need debtors, not millionair­es, in our public offices.

Let’s be clear about another thing. Biden absolutely has the legal authority to use executive power to cancel all federal student debt. Congress granted this authority decades ago as part of the

Higher Education Act. It’s even been put to the test: in response to the Covid pandemic, Donald Trump and his former education secretary, Betsy DeVos, used that authority three times to suspend payments and student loan interest.

As he rambled on, Biden gave the distinct impression that he preferred not to have the power to do so. That way he could blame Congress should his campaign promises go unkept. (The day after the town hall, Biden’s press secretary, Jen Psaki, attempted to clarify her boss’s remarks about whether he will use executive authority to cancel student debt. She stated that the administra­tion was still considerin­g the possibilit­y.)

Adding to the confusion, Biden seemed unable to keep his own campaign pledges straight, muddling his student debt cancellati­on proposals. For the record, he campaigned on two distinct planks. One: “immediate” cancellati­on of $10,000 for every borrower as a form of Covid relief. Two: the cancellati­on of all undergradu­ate student loans for debt-holders who attended public universiti­es and HBCUs and who earn up to $125,000 a year. Keeping these two promises is the absolute minimum the Biden administra­tion needs to do to keep the public’s trust.

But the Biden administra­tion should, and can, do much more. Biden should cancel all student debt using executive authority. It is the simplest way the new administra­tion can help tens of millions of people who are being crushed by the double whammy of unpayable loans and an economydes­troying pandemic.

Yet, to date, all the Biden administra­tion has done for this country’s 45 million student debtors is extend Trump and DeVos’s federal student loan payment suspension. Continuing a flawed Republican policy is hardly a progressiv­e victory – especially not for the 8 million FFEL borrowers who are unconscion­ably left out of the moratorium.

Biden owes this country debt relief not only because he campaigned on it, but because he helped cause the problem. A former senator from Delaware, the credit card capital of the world, he spent decades carrying water for financial interests and expanding access to student loans while limiting borrower protection­s.

Biden’s record shows that he won’t address the problem without being pushed. Indeed, the fact that the president has embraced debt cancellati­on at all (however inadequate his proposals) is testament to ongoing grassroots efforts. The Debt Collective, a group I organize with, has been pushing for student debt abolition and free public college for nearly a decade. On 21 January, we launched the Biden Jubilee 100 – 100 borrowers on debt strike demanding full cancellati­on within the administra­tion’s first hundred days. A growing list of senators and congresspe­ople have signed on to resolution­s calling on Biden to cancel $50,000 a borrower using executive authority. (It’s worth noting that the $50,000 figure is based on outdated research. After three years of rapidly rising debt loads, the scholars behind it now recommend $75,000 of cancellati­on.) A growing chorus of voices from across the country and a range of background­s are shouting in unison: cancel student debt.

Biden’s brand is empath-in-chief, but on student debt he is alarmingly out of touch. The president has shared that his own children borrowed for college and noted that he was the “poorest man in Congress” – meaning the poorest man in a body of millionair­es. He didn’t question the ease with which his well-connected kids got well-compensate­d jobs enabling them to repay their loans, nor mention that people his age were able to go to college without being burdened by a mountain of debt. All people want today is the same opportunit­y that Biden and his peers had.

Instead of acknowledg­ing this generation­al disparity, Biden reiterated a common criticism of more generous forms of student debt cancellati­on – that it would help the privileged, specifical­ly the minuscule subset of debtholder­s who attended the Ivy League. But as Ocasio-Cortez tweeted in response: “Very wealthy people already have a student loan forgivenes­s program. It’s called their parents.” As things stand, poor and working people typically pay more for the same degrees than their affluent counterpar­ts due to years or decades of monthly payments and accumulati­ng interest. Our debt-financed higher education system is a tax on poor people who dare pursue a better life.

Imagine if, instead of defending the status quo, Biden used his platform to articulate the social benefits of cancelling student debt. He could have said that cancelling student debt will support 45 million Americans and provide an estimated trillion-dollar economic boost over the next decade and create millions of desperatel­y needed jobs. He could have spoken about canceling student debt as a way to help close the racial wealth gap, acknowledg­ing that Black borrowers are the most burdened, or talked about how education should be free and accessible to all if we want to expand opportunit­y and deepen democracy. He could have acknowledg­ed that cancellati­on will help struggling seniors, especially those having their social security checks garnished because of student loan defaults. He could have mentioned that debt cancellati­on is popular, even among many Republican­s, and that eliminatin­g it will help his party stay in power.

He didn’t say any of that, and so we have to say it. Debtors have to get organized, connecting online and protesting in the streets. We live in a period of intersecti­ng crises. Some of them are very difficult to solve. But cancelling student debt is easy. By refusing to act, the president and his administra­tion are choosing to perpetuate a system that causes profound, pointless, and preventabl­e harm.

Astra Taylor is the author of Democracy May Not Exist, but We’ll Miss It When It’s Gone, and an organizer with the Debt Collective

Biden’s brand is empath-in-chief, but on student debt he is alarmingly out of touch

 ??  ?? Students activists at Washington University in St Louis pull a mock ball and chain representi­ng student debt. Photograph: Paul J. Richards/ AFP/Getty Images
Students activists at Washington University in St Louis pull a mock ball and chain representi­ng student debt. Photograph: Paul J. Richards/ AFP/Getty Images

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