Michael Bloomberg has been taking some body blows as he bids to secure the Democratic presidential nomination, but he could still have a major impact on the race 鈥 not least by coming up with a slate of higher education policies that the party might be able to get behind.
The last major contender in the battle to challenge Donald Trump for the US presidency to weigh in with a post-secondary blueprint, Mr Bloomberg鈥檚 promises include abolishing tuition fees in two-year community colleges, a doubling of federal aid for needy students, and an income-based student loan repayment system leading to eventual forgiveness.
Although it is not the pledge of four years of free college that some candidates have made, it is more generous than other proposals and it reflects what policy experts saw as a skilled distillation of the party鈥檚 common ground.
鈥淚f you were to take all of the Democrats鈥 plans and lay them out, and identify some of the repeating themes, and some of the better, more thoughtful proposals, that鈥檚 what the Bloomberg plan is,鈥 said Robert Shireman, a strategist in the Clinton and Obama administrations.
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The plan places Mr Bloomberg solidly 鈥渋n the middle鈥 of the free college debate, said Wesley Whistle, senior adviser for policy and strategy at the New America Foundation.
Mr Bloomberg unveiled his higher education plan in the same week that the billionaire鈥檚 heavy advertising expenditures brought him enough public support in national polls to qualify him for his first candidates鈥 debate. He then suffered through a performance that, on other major campaign topics, was widely viewed as damaging to his prospects.
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But regardless of whether Mr Bloomberg eventually wins the presidency, experts said, his on higher education policy underscores the Democrats鈥 confidence in the potency of university finance as an issue that could give it a boost in November鈥檚 elections.
The amount of outstanding student loan debt has grown more than 150聽per cent over the past 11 years. Despite such trends, the Trump administration has persisted in asking Congress to end the one existing federal student loan forgiveness programme 鈥 for those who enter public service 鈥 and has fought court battles to stop tuition fee reimbursements for defrauded students.
The Bloomberg plan does, however, share with the Trump administration and many Democrats a broad goal of improving job-oriented training, said Anthony Carnevale, research professor of public policy at Georgetown University.
The federal government currently treats most job-specific training separately from other post-secondary education, mostly through the Labor Department鈥檚 subsidies to state-run programmes. Mr Bloomberg鈥檚 plan, said Professor Carnevale, director of Georgetown鈥檚 Center on Education and the Workforce, includes a fairly sophisticated attempt to reduce such divisions, in part by encouraging states to ease credit transfers between types of institutions.
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Such an approach 鈥渕ay save the day鈥 for some universities attracting declining numbers of school-leavers, Professor Carnevale said.
One unique aspect of the Bloomberg plan is its call to end legacy admissions 鈥 the practice in many elite private universities of favouring applications of the children of their alumni. The plan does not suggest an outright ban, although it holds out that possibility if change does not occur voluntarily.
However, Mr Bloomberg is not seeking a ban on admissions preferences for wealthy donors. One clue about the candidate鈥檚 intent, Mr Shireman said, could be found in his philanthropic endeavours. Mr Bloomberg鈥檚 charitable foundation has done much to help low-income students, but his biggest single gift was of $1.8聽billion (拢1.4聽billion) to his alma mater, Johns Hopkins University, proclaiming it as a move to 鈥渆liminate money problems from the admissions equation for qualified students鈥.
Such a massive donation, Mr Shireman said, could have helped far more students in more meaningful ways if it had been given instead to the nation鈥檚 historically black colleges and universities.
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鈥淭hat would make a real difference to probably several HBCUs,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut instead it was to one that already had a very large endowment, and could not be said to have demonstrated great progress on enrolling low-income students.鈥
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