https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/pers...es/ar-BB10sWHp
Bernie Sanders’s plan to wipe out Americans’ $1.6 trillion in student  debt could face thorny political and practical problems if he is  elected president in November.
The Vermont senator, an Independent  who has surged to the top of the national polls in the Democratic  presidential primary, has drawn little congressional support for his  plan. A bill he introduced with Rep. Ilhan Omar (D., Minn.) last summer  has just a dozen co-sponsors, all in the Democratic-controlled House,  where it has languished.
A majority of Americans, 57%, oppose  canceling all student debt, according to a September 2019 Wall Street  Journal/NBC News poll. Among the strongest opponents are groups  Democrats hope to peel away from President Trump: Rust Belt voters,  independents, whites, men and voters in rural areas.
             
 Mr. Sanders has said his plan would free up money for young adults to  buy homes and cars, stirring economic growth. “It is not merely immoral  to doom an entire generation to endless educational debt—it is also bad  for our economy,” Mr. Sanders wrote in an op-ed for Fortune.
More  than 43 million Americans owe student debt, which has quadrupled since  2005 and is now the second-highest form of household debt, after  mortgages, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. More than  90% of all student debt was originated or guaranteed by the federal  government. The rest—about $123 billion—was originated by private banks  without a government guarantee, according to MeasureOne, an analytics  firm.
Mr.  Sanders proposes to pay for the debt-forgiveness effort with a new tax  on financial transactions. Progressive Democrats in Congress introduced a  bill last year to impose a 0.1% tax on deals such as stock purchases  and derivatives trades. The idea has gained momentum in recent years as  progressives seek higher taxes on the financial sector, but Republicans  generally oppose the levy.
Another Democratic presidential primary  contender, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.), has said she would use  executive powers to sidestep Congress and cancel up to $640 billion in  student debt. A Sanders campaign spokesman said Mr. Sanders hasn’t  studied such a move but would look into the possibility.
Mr.  Sanders has proposed wiping out all student loans, federal or private.  His proposal would authorize the U.S. Education Department to buy and  cancel student loans from private lenders, covering any interest due and  late charges.
Beneficiaries would include borrowers who have  refinanced their federal loans through lenders such as Social Finance  Inc., or who got loans from nongovernment lenders such as SLM Corp.’s  Sallie Mae and Wells Fargo & Co. Parents who borrowed through  federal or private student-loan programs would benefit, but not those  who borrowed money against other assets—such as through a home-equity  line of credit—to cover educational costs.
Mr. Sanders’s plan also  would help many well-off borrowers, including workers with graduate  degrees and those who attended elite private colleges. Graduate-school  debt accounts for roughly 40% of all student debt.
Most borrowers  in default owe relatively little—less than $10,000—typically because  they dropped out of college or because they attended short-duration  trade programs.
Mr. Sanders has said he believes education is a societal obligation and any benefit should be universal.
Supporters  of debt cancellation say millions of borrowers attended schools of  dubious quality, or were swindled by recruiters with deceptive pitches,  and shouldn’t have to repay their debt. 
The WSJ/NBC News poll showed that among Democrats, 63% favor the plan, while 34% oppose it.
Mr.  Sanders’s plan is designed to appeal to voters such as Chelsea Moore, a  29-year-old accountant in Lexington, Ky., who leans Democratic and owes  $74,000 in student debt from graduate school at Syracuse University.
Ms.  Moore, who hasn’t decided whom she will support for president, shares a  372-square-foot apartment with her boyfriend and their dog, Keto, so  that she can keep up on her student-loan payments. She plans to pay off  her loans within four years.
Ms. Moore says she has reservations  about Mr. Sanders’s plan because it wouldn’t be fair to borrowers who  have already repaid their loans. She said she would consider it if he  also pushed to end the federal student loan program. “It won’t be fair  to those after me who incur more loans,” she said. “What are we going to  do, run a forgiveness program every 20 years?”
Tonya James, 33, a  senior analyst for a securities firm in Buffalo, N.Y., strongly  supports Mr. Sanders’s plan, which she said would allow her to spend  more on child care and other purchases. She has repaid about $30,000 in  student loans she borrowed for college and graduate school, and still  owes $36,000.
The mother of two children said, “My generation is severely underwater by policies that are not favorable to growth.”
Mr.  Sanders has called for maintaining the government loan program, but in a  limited role. He says he would limit Americans’ reliance on student  debt by making public college tuition-free, boosting scholarship money  for poor students, capping the interest rate on new student loans at  1.88% and expanding a program that forgives debt for borrowers who go  into public-service jobs.
Some students would still need to take  out federal loans to cover living expenses at public colleges and  tuition at private colleges and graduate school.
Tom Baslee, 76, a  self-described “yellow dog” Democrat, hates Mr. Sanders’s idea. The  Missouri resident spent two years in the Army and a career delivering  letters for the U.S. Postal Service. The savings he scrounged together  helped put a daughter through college.
Forgive other people’s  student debt? “That’s crazy,” says Mr. Baslee, of Boonville. “I wouldn’t  mind trying to get some public service out of these people to help  cancel the debt. But if it’s just giving them a free ride, I don’t  believe in that.”
Bolshevik Bernie wants to spend trillions - and buying the votes of folks with student debt is part of his plan - the question is - that Bernie won't answer - how much does it cost, how will he pay for it- and how long does this go on???
a great deal of the debt is i the hands of "capitalist" organizations - tht would profit from the buyout - has Bernie considered that????
And once started, a pay-off the debt program  must inevitably be continued to crate free college for all time to all colleges.  And how expensive is that - and how many Billionairs are there in the US to pay for all of Bernie's Vote Buying. 
Bolshevik Bernie - Communist and shameless Vote Buyer.  
When the American public trets the Treasury as its purse - representative democracy is doomed. 
Now for all the responses from the the terribly insecure Fascist DPST's who want Bernie to "Take care" of them, and satiate their insatiable desire for security from all risks in Life.