Harris stays quiet on student loans as cancellation loses its political
luster
Send a link to a friend
[October 28, 2024]
By COLLIN BINKLEY and ALIA WONG
WASHINGTON (AP) — At a campaign rally in April, President Joe Biden told
a Wisconsin crowd about his latest “life-changing” plan for student loan
cancellation, promising financial relief for more than 30 million
Americans.
But Kamala Harris has steered clear of the issue at her political events
since replacing Biden as the Democratic nominee for president. The vice
president's platform mentions it just twice, and with no specific plan.
As she courts moderate voters, Harris has focused on policies targeting
Americans without a college degree.
“For far too long, our nation has encouraged only one path to success: a
four-year college degree,” Harris said in September in Wilkes-Barre,
Pennsylvania. “Our nation needs to recognize the value of other paths.”
In the span of just a few years, student loan cancellation has gone from
a pillar of the Democratic Party to a political liability. Once seen as
a sure-fire way to energize young voters, the issue has now become a
bludgeon wielded by Republicans who say it heaps advantage on elites and
comes at the expense of those who repaid their loans or did not attend
college.
The issue came up just once in the September presidential debate, when
Republican Donald Trump hammered Harris and Biden for failing to deliver
their promise of widespread cancellation. The former president called it
a “total catastrophe" that “taunted young people.”
“They didn’t even come close to getting student loans,” Trump said.
Biden's student loan forgiveness efforts have faced relentless
roadblocks
Biden, who once questioned the legality of mass student loan
forgiveness, campaigned on the issue after progressives like Sen. Bernie
Sanders, I-Vt., made it a mainstream idea. But as president, Biden has
faced relentless challenges from Republican opponents. For the roughly
42 million people with federal student loans, hope of having them
forgiven has turned into resignation and disillusionment.
Biden's first plan to cancel up to $20,000 for millions of people was
blocked by the Supreme Court last year. A second, narrower plan has been
halted by a federal judge after Republican-led states sued. A separate
policy intended to lower loan payments for struggling borrowers has been
paused by a judge, also after Republican-controlled states challenged
it.
On Friday, the Biden administration moved ahead with yet another attempt
at student loan cancellation, this one focused on Americans who face
heavy financial burdens beyond their student loans. It faces an
uncertain future, arriving less than two weeks before the Nov. 5
election.
The legal uncertainty has probably contributed to Harris' de-emphasis of
cancellation, said Michelle Dimino, education program director at the
centrist think tank Third Way. It's also an issue her base is familiar
with, she added.
“There’s not too much new she can offer before we know what will happen
in the courts,” Dimino said. When Biden first pitched broad
cancellation, it was something that hadn't been tried. ”Now, it's a
totally different landscape than it was in 2020, when it was a clean
slate."
Harris’ silence also signals the political risks, especially in a tight
election. Any new promise of loan cancellation would energize
Republicans who have made it a rallying cry. For voters who could
benefit from cancellation, it’s a promise they have heard before.
“The Harris campaign has realized this is not necessarily a winning
political issue,” said Preston Cooper, a senior fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute.
“The student loan agenda is in tatters and hasn't really helped them win
any votes,” Cooper said.
Even moderate Americans appear skeptical of student loan forgiveness. A
June poll from the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy
and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found
that 3 in 10 U.S. adults said they approve of Biden’s work on student
debt, and it wasn’t much better among those repaying loans. Slightly
more than half of Democrats said they supported the president’s work,
while 18% of independents said the same.
[to top of second column]
|
Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris arrives
to speak about reproductive care with healthcare providers and
medical students in Portage, Mich., Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024. (AP
Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Both Harris and Trump promote alternatives to college
The Harris campaign declined to give specifics or answer questions
about her cancellation plan.
Her platform mentions student loans only after a full page of
policies targeting workers without degrees. At the September rally
in Pennsylvania, Harris drew applause when she said she would get
rid of unnecessary degree requirements for federal jobs. She did not
mention student loans in her 20-minute speech.
“Requiring a certain degree does not necessarily talk about one’s
skills,” Harris told the audience at Wilkes University, a private
college in northeast Pennsylvania.
Harris' comments echo a traditional Republican talking point that
has increasingly been embraced by Democrats as more Americans
question the value of a college degree.
“Student loan forgiveness is ... maybe alienating some of the
support that Harris is hoping to get from the non-college-educated,”
said Andrew Gillen, a research fellow at the libertarian Cato
Institute's Center for Educational Freedom. “These kinds of
polarizing topics are poisoning the well for other things that have
bipartisan support. Once issues like student loan forgiveness are
put to rest, I think a lot more of that bipartisan agreement will
emerge.”
It’s one of the few areas of common ground between Harris and Trump.
In his platform, the former Republican president said he will
“support the creation of additional, drastically more affordable
alternatives to a traditional four-year college degree.” It doesn’t
mention loans. Trump has opposed cancellation, saying it’s illegal.
“President Trump will implement real solutions to make education,
housing, and the cost of living affordable again for young people so
they can live the American dream," Karoline Leavitt, national press
secretary for Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign, told the AP.
Student loan advocates point to Trump's vague promises, failure to
fix Public Service Loan Forgiveness and appointment of the judges
who stymied broad student debt relief. “Trump is proud of his work
to hurt working families,” said Melissa Byrne, a political organizer
who has pushed for cancellation.
Fate of further student loan cancellation unclear
As attorney general in California, Harris led efforts to penalize
for-profit colleges for defrauding borrowers. As a presidential
candidate in 2019, Harris proposed a narrower path to loan
forgiveness than those pushed by Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren,
D-Mass. Harris' plan would have provided $20,000 in relief to any
federal Pell Grant recipient who started a business in a
disadvantaged community and kept it running for three years.
After the Biden administration announced this month that it had
canceled loans for more than 1 million public service workers,
Harris issued a statement applauding the work, again generally
promising to continue making “higher education more affordable.”
Aissa Canchola Bañez, political director at Protect Borrowers
Action, said Harris' track record on student debt relief suggests
that she would uphold the pledges made under Biden.
“This is an issue that she has been working on since long before her
time coming to Washington, D.C.,” Canchola Bañez said, pointing to
the unprecedented amount of student loan debt forgiven under the
Biden administration. “We’ve seen the vice president come out very
forcefully applauding the relief that has come out thus far."
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
|