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US Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos speaks during the fifth meeting of the Federal Commission on School Safety in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building adjacent to the White House in Washington, D.C. on August 16, 2018. (Photo: Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)
Billionaire Education Secretary Betsy DeVos this week proposed handing over the federal government's $1.5 trillion student loan portfolio to a "stand-alone government corporation," a move observers condemned as a corrupt ploy to strip the next president of the ability to cancel student loan debt.
"This very much appears to be a Betsy DeVos scheme to block the next president from unilaterally forgiving federal student debt, which she is well aware a president could do without Congress," The Intercept's Ryan Grim wrote in a series of tweets late Wednesday. "The DeVos family is heavily invested in the student loan industry and this is just flat-out corruption."
"No, this isn't it, Ms. DeVos. Cancel all student debt."
--Sen. Bernie Sanders
DeVos' plan, first introduced on Tuesday, would spin off the Education Department's Federal Student Aid office into a new and supposedly independent federal agency.
"One has to wonder: why isn't Federal Student Aid a stand-alone government corporation, run by a professional, expert, and apolitical Board of Governors?" DeVos tweeted Tuesday. "A separate Federal Student Aid would be better positioned to deliver world-class service to students and their families as they finance higher education."
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate who has proposed wiping out all student loan debt, dismissed the Education Secretary's plan on Twitter.
"No, this isn't it, Ms. DeVos," said Sanders. "Cancel all student debt."
Sanders' national press secretary Briahna Joy Gray also weighed in:
\u201cNormally the rich are moderately more subtle about rigging the system in their favor. \n\nThey're scared. We're ready.\u201d— Briahna Joy Gray (@Briahna Joy Gray) 1575507666
Devos' proposal, which has not been fully developed, came weeks after she was held in contempt of court failing to comply with an order to stop collecting loan payments from former students of a defunct for-profit college company that defrauded tens of thousands of borrowers.
The Department of Education admitted in a court filing Monday that it improperly attempted to collect student loan payments from 45,000 borrowers, far more than the department originally estimated.
As the New York Times reported Tuesday, during DeVos' tenure as Education Secretary, "a program to relieve the debts of teachers, police officers and others who work in public-service jobs has become a bureaucratic disaster, rejecting nearly all who apply. The department allowed a troubled for-profit chain, Dream Center Education Holdings, to collect millions of dollars in federal funds that it was ineligible to receive before it collapsed this year."
Democratic presidential contender Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) tweeted Wednesday that "Betsy DeVos really didn't like being held in contempt of court, so she wants to make federal student loans someone else's problem."
"Of course, there's a simpler idea," said Warren. "Universal free college and technical school, and canceling student loan debt."
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Billionaire Education Secretary Betsy DeVos this week proposed handing over the federal government's $1.5 trillion student loan portfolio to a "stand-alone government corporation," a move observers condemned as a corrupt ploy to strip the next president of the ability to cancel student loan debt.
"This very much appears to be a Betsy DeVos scheme to block the next president from unilaterally forgiving federal student debt, which she is well aware a president could do without Congress," The Intercept's Ryan Grim wrote in a series of tweets late Wednesday. "The DeVos family is heavily invested in the student loan industry and this is just flat-out corruption."
"No, this isn't it, Ms. DeVos. Cancel all student debt."
--Sen. Bernie Sanders
DeVos' plan, first introduced on Tuesday, would spin off the Education Department's Federal Student Aid office into a new and supposedly independent federal agency.
"One has to wonder: why isn't Federal Student Aid a stand-alone government corporation, run by a professional, expert, and apolitical Board of Governors?" DeVos tweeted Tuesday. "A separate Federal Student Aid would be better positioned to deliver world-class service to students and their families as they finance higher education."
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate who has proposed wiping out all student loan debt, dismissed the Education Secretary's plan on Twitter.
"No, this isn't it, Ms. DeVos," said Sanders. "Cancel all student debt."
Sanders' national press secretary Briahna Joy Gray also weighed in:
\u201cNormally the rich are moderately more subtle about rigging the system in their favor. \n\nThey're scared. We're ready.\u201d— Briahna Joy Gray (@Briahna Joy Gray) 1575507666
Devos' proposal, which has not been fully developed, came weeks after she was held in contempt of court failing to comply with an order to stop collecting loan payments from former students of a defunct for-profit college company that defrauded tens of thousands of borrowers.
The Department of Education admitted in a court filing Monday that it improperly attempted to collect student loan payments from 45,000 borrowers, far more than the department originally estimated.
As the New York Times reported Tuesday, during DeVos' tenure as Education Secretary, "a program to relieve the debts of teachers, police officers and others who work in public-service jobs has become a bureaucratic disaster, rejecting nearly all who apply. The department allowed a troubled for-profit chain, Dream Center Education Holdings, to collect millions of dollars in federal funds that it was ineligible to receive before it collapsed this year."
Democratic presidential contender Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) tweeted Wednesday that "Betsy DeVos really didn't like being held in contempt of court, so she wants to make federal student loans someone else's problem."
"Of course, there's a simpler idea," said Warren. "Universal free college and technical school, and canceling student loan debt."
Billionaire Education Secretary Betsy DeVos this week proposed handing over the federal government's $1.5 trillion student loan portfolio to a "stand-alone government corporation," a move observers condemned as a corrupt ploy to strip the next president of the ability to cancel student loan debt.
"This very much appears to be a Betsy DeVos scheme to block the next president from unilaterally forgiving federal student debt, which she is well aware a president could do without Congress," The Intercept's Ryan Grim wrote in a series of tweets late Wednesday. "The DeVos family is heavily invested in the student loan industry and this is just flat-out corruption."
"No, this isn't it, Ms. DeVos. Cancel all student debt."
--Sen. Bernie Sanders
DeVos' plan, first introduced on Tuesday, would spin off the Education Department's Federal Student Aid office into a new and supposedly independent federal agency.
"One has to wonder: why isn't Federal Student Aid a stand-alone government corporation, run by a professional, expert, and apolitical Board of Governors?" DeVos tweeted Tuesday. "A separate Federal Student Aid would be better positioned to deliver world-class service to students and their families as they finance higher education."
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate who has proposed wiping out all student loan debt, dismissed the Education Secretary's plan on Twitter.
"No, this isn't it, Ms. DeVos," said Sanders. "Cancel all student debt."
Sanders' national press secretary Briahna Joy Gray also weighed in:
\u201cNormally the rich are moderately more subtle about rigging the system in their favor. \n\nThey're scared. We're ready.\u201d— Briahna Joy Gray (@Briahna Joy Gray) 1575507666
Devos' proposal, which has not been fully developed, came weeks after she was held in contempt of court failing to comply with an order to stop collecting loan payments from former students of a defunct for-profit college company that defrauded tens of thousands of borrowers.
The Department of Education admitted in a court filing Monday that it improperly attempted to collect student loan payments from 45,000 borrowers, far more than the department originally estimated.
As the New York Times reported Tuesday, during DeVos' tenure as Education Secretary, "a program to relieve the debts of teachers, police officers and others who work in public-service jobs has become a bureaucratic disaster, rejecting nearly all who apply. The department allowed a troubled for-profit chain, Dream Center Education Holdings, to collect millions of dollars in federal funds that it was ineligible to receive before it collapsed this year."
Democratic presidential contender Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) tweeted Wednesday that "Betsy DeVos really didn't like being held in contempt of court, so she wants to make federal student loans someone else's problem."
"Of course, there's a simpler idea," said Warren. "Universal free college and technical school, and canceling student loan debt."