Current:Home > MarketsRekubit-I just paid my taxes. Biden's pandering on student loans will end up costing us all more. -Infinite Edge Learning
Rekubit-I just paid my taxes. Biden's pandering on student loans will end up costing us all more.
EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-07 02:18:51
My husband and RekubitI both work full time. We like our jobs, but we work hard. Our reward? Sending thousands of dollars to the federal government each year.
Much like millions of other Americans on Tax Day, we had to write a large check and send it off to the Internal Revenue Service.
It’s always painful to kiss that money goodbye. It’s even more difficult when I know just how poorly it will be spent.
Case in point: President Joe Biden continues to doggedly pursue student loan “forgiveness” ahead of the November election.
Biden fumbles FAFSA:Biden's so worried about 'canceling' debt he's ignored families who need to pay for college
Perhaps Biden misread his job description. Instead of commander in chief, he is acting like the panderer in chief.
Essentially, he’s using our tax dollars as campaign funds.
Biden is using taxpayer dollars to get himself reelected
It seems not a week goes by when Biden isn’t announcing some plan that will magically wipe out swaths of student loans. That’s intentional, as Biden struggles with keeping young voters interested in his candidacy.
He’s betting that erasing all this debt will buy him more votes come November.
That became more urgent after the U.S. Supreme Court last summer overturned his initial unilateral attempt to cancel more than $400 billion in debt.
Biden uses big government to buy votes.Meanwhile, Argentina's Milei schools him on capitalism.
Rather than learn anything from this setback, Biden immediately set off to find other ways he could force taxpayers to cover the cost of paying off other people's student loans – never mind that the president's new efforts are almost surely just as unconstitutional as his first try.
As a taxpayer (and someone who has paid off my college loans), I find Biden’s costly new entitlement program to be irksome. After all, the debt doesn’t simply go away – it is loaded onto taxpayers' backs and added to our $34 trillion and counting national debt.
Last week, Biden waved his magic wand again, announcing his latest round of lucky borrowers. More than 270,000 people in Biden’s revamped income-driven repayment plans will see $7.4 billion in debt canceled.
That brings Biden's total debt transference from student borrowers to taxpayers at large to $153 billion. About 4.3 million borrowers have benefited from Biden’s generosity with taxpayers' money.
And Biden has plans to expand who’s eligible in the coming months through a different program.
In addition to adding to the national debt and our tax burden as a country, Biden’s actions are inflationary. Out-of-control government spending is one reason why inflation has remained so entrenched during his administration.
Forgive loans so people can 'go back to school'?
My guess is most people who get their student debt zeroed out by Biden will go on some sort of spending spree. Progressive superstar Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez recently admitted as much while on the "Late Show with Stephen Colbert."
The U.S. representative from New York said Biden’s latest student cancellation proposal means “hope to buy a house, or have a kid, or travel abroad or maybe even go back to school.”
America's deep divide:Are we hurtling toward a new 'Civil War'? Hollywood plays to fears of Trump-Biden rematch.
That tracks with what a 2022 poll found after Biden’s initial debt plan rolled out. According to Intelligent.com, 73% of anticipated recipients said they planned to spend the forgiven amount on nonessential things like travel, eating out and new gadgets.
These are all things most Americans want. But why should taxpayers who didn’t go to college or who have paid off their debt subsidize the spending decisions of strangers?
And let’s not forget the most egregious part of Biden’s tax-dollar giveaway. Biden loves to tout how this election is all about democracy. In continuing with such sweeping executive action, however, he’s proving that he is a threat to our system of checks and balances.
Biden has failed to go through Congress, which should sign off on such a costly expenditure. And he has ignored a pointed rebuke from the Supreme Court.
"The Biden administration is once again looking to have a huge, unilateral – and hence unconstitutional – student debt cancellation," Neal McCluskey, education policy expert at the Cato Institute, observed on X.
I don't appreciate my hard-earned dollars being used by Biden to buy favor among voters. And I resent that he's doing it in such a blatantly undemocratic manner.
Ingrid Jacques is a columnist at USA TODAY. Contact her at [email protected] or on X, formerly Twitter: @Ingrid_Jacques.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- $6,000 reward offered for information about a black bear shot in rural West Feliciana Parish
- Taylor Swift becomes a billionaire with new re-recording of 1989 album
- How to grow facial hair: Tips from a dermatologist
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Europe vs. US economies... and a dime heist
- The sudden death of China’s former No. 2 leader Li Keqiang has shocked many
- Inmate suspected in prison attack on Kristin Smart’s killer previously murdered ‘I-5 Strangler’
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Devoted youth bowling coach. 'Hero' bar manager. Families remember Maine shooting victims
Ranking
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Biden will face a primary bid from Rep. Dean Phillips, who says Democrats need to focus on future
- Four Gulf of Mexico federal tracts designated for wind power development by Biden administration
- War-weary mothers, wives and children of Ukrainian soldiers demand a cap on military service time
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Mainers See Climate Promise in Ballot Initiative to Create a Statewide Nonprofit Electric Utility
- Shooting on I-190 in Buffalo leaves 1 dead, 2 injured
- Taylor Swift's '1989' rerelease is here! These are the two songs we love the most
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Sephora Beauty Insider Sale Event: What Our Beauty Editors Are Buying
NFL places Kansas City Chiefs receiver Justyn Ross on Commissioner Exempt list
Is it a straw or a spoon? McDonald's is ditching those 'spindles' in McFlurry cups
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
You'll soon be able to microwave your ramen: Cup Noodles switching to paper cups in 2024
Spain’s report on Catholic Church sex abuse estimates victims could number in hundreds of thousands
Chinese fighter pilot harasses U.S. B-52 over South China Sea, Pentagon says