FIRST ON FOX: Statements made by President Biden in Wisconsin last year created a tug of war between moderate and progressive Democrats over student debt forgiveness and forced some from the White House to clean up the president’s remarks, according to an upcoming book from two New York Times reporters.
An excerpt provided to Fox News from Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns’ forthcoming book, “This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America’s Future,” describes the rocky response from progressives after Biden made clear that he was not open to the idea of forgiving a great deal of student loan debt, particularly for those who attended Ivy League schools.
Speaking at a Milwaukee town hall in February 2021, Biden rejected an audience member’s plea for his administration to forgive at least $50,000 in student loans for Americans across the country.
“I will not make that happen,” Biden said. “It depends on whether or not you go to a private university or public university.”
According to the book, Biden, who told audience members at the town hall he was uninterested in forgiving “the billions of dollars in debt for people who have gone to Harvard and Yale and Penn,” seemingly associated “hefty debts with fancy universities.”
Biden’s comments sent his staff, including chief of staff Ron Klain, into a spiral as they attempted to alter what the president said in an effort to appease the progressive wing of the party. That wing had been calling for him to forgive more than the $10,000 he had originally promised, the authors explained.
Despite Biden’s own remarks, Klain, according to the book, spoke in private “with several congressional supporters of debt cancellation to assure them his boss had not intended to take such a firm position.”
“One lawmaker who spoke with Ron Klain recalled him saying gently that sometimes Biden gets a little tangled up in his public statements,” the authors wrote. “When a group of House progressives raised the subject again with Klain in a meeting several weeks later, the trusted aide alluded to Biden’s comments as an error.”
“We corrected that the next day, right?”…
Read More: Biden’s student debt remarks in 2021 led White House staff to appease progressives, new book says