Marco Rubio roasted for sharing how easy it was for him to repay student loans by writing a book

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by DaFunkJunkie
image for Marco Rubio roasted for sharing how easy it was for him to repay student loans by writing a book

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The GOP continues to flail in response to President Joe Biden’s announcement of federal student loan relief for millions of Americans, a development that will take years worth of financial pressure off the backs of many who have been struggling to make repayments.

The latest half-hearted attempt to attack Mr Biden’s plan came on Saturday from Marco Rubio, the senator from Florida, who suggested on Fox News that Americans follow a different path for student loan relief.

“I talked about the fact that we need to reform student loans. I owed over $100,000 in student loans. The day I got elected in the Senate I had over $100,000, still, in student loans that I was able to pay off because I wrote a book,” said the Republican.

His comments betray two realities: Number one, getting elected to the Senate (or otherwise becoming famous) and writing a book is not a responsible or realistic path to debt freedom for the vast majority of Americans. Number two, Republicans do not have a plan for student loan relief.

The GOP had four years in power under Donald Trump to act on the issue, including two years of dual-chamber control in the House and Senate, and did nothing on the issues of America’s staggering student loan debt or the simple fact that college tuition appears to be spiralling out of control. Neither of those issue got so much as a mention from Mr Rubio or his colleagues during the Trump presidency.

The Florida senator was widely mocked as a result of his inane suggestion. Some even noted that sales of books from political figures are widely known to be inflated by publishers and various organisations for PR reasons.

Mr Rubio’s comments also reveal the clumsy response from Republicans and conservative Democratic critics to Mr Biden’s plan over the past week. Opponents of the plan have shifted between outright insulting vast segments of the population who carry student loan debt and claiming falsely that the plan is a handout to rich people — despite the plan’s provision affecting Pell Grant recipients which by itself could affect as many as seven in 10 HBCU students.

Mr Biden, meanwhile, has defended his actions with a rare vigor that has left Republicans on the backstep. The White House was widely praised by the left on Twitter and saw enthusiastic engagement from its supporters after going on the attack last week and posting a thread of tweets directly calling out Republican lawmakers who opposed student debt relief but quietly took Paycheck Protection Program loans — forgiven completely by the government — to keep their own various side businesses profitable during the Covid pandemic.

FortySixAndYou on August 28th, 2022 at 15:19 UTC »

“I talked about the fact that we need to reform student loans. I owed over $100,000 in student loans. The day I got elected in the Senate I had over $100,000, still, in student loans that I was able to pay off because I wrote a book,” said the Republican.

Speaking of $100,000, wasn't it Romney who suggested that if a college graduate couldn't find a decent job, they should borrow a $100,000 from Dad and just start their own business?

I understand that people grow up rich and are disconnected from ordinary life as I have to live it, but you'd think if you were going to be a politician, you'd try to have some grasp of it. Or at least make the effort to somewhat convincingly fake it.

TheRedBear1917 on August 28th, 2022 at 15:15 UTC »

It's so obvious that the political Right really has nothing of substance to say for themselves when they are the opposition to a party that puts forward - and then does - things that meaningfully help people.

Something to remember.

doofer20 on August 28th, 2022 at 15:14 UTC »

Just get rich and famous if you want to get out of debt? Why didn't I think about that