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A Failing Grade: Obama’s Record with College Students

Today, ESPN unveils President Obama’s NCAA Final Four picks. Tomorrow, they will reveal his full brackets.

These days, it seems like the president spends more time thinking about the Final Four than the difficulties facing a family of four: the soaring college tuition, the sluggish economy, skyrocketing gas prices, and massive national debt. Of course, no one begrudges the president’s filling out a bracket. But March Madness should not trump our many national crises.

In November, though, college voters could determine the winner of an even more important contest—the presidential election.

They would do well to remember these words from President Obama in 2008, just a few days before the election: “The real question is, ‘Will this country be better off four years from now?’”

Thanks to Obama’s policies, young voters are not better off than they were four years ago. And today’s college students won’t be better off four years from now, either.

The cost of college has reached an all-time high. According to College Board, average tuition for an in-state four year college has increased from $6,591 to $8,244 since Obama took office—a 25 percent increase.

Earlier this year and with much fanfare, President Obama announced plans to reduce that cost. Unfortunately, his plans will likely do more harm than good. Much like his college loan reforms, which will save the average student less than $10 a month, they are not serious proposals. They are political ploys to win back dispirited young voters.

The president’s traditional allies have called him out for this. Matt Miller, from the liberal Center for American Progress took him to task in the Washington Post last month:

“[T]he remedies [Obama] sketched in his State of the Union address and in a speech at the University of Michigan last week are textbook examples of proposals meant to signal the president’s ‘values’ (and win votes) while doing little to address the problem.”

This is typical Obama: point out a problem, offer a “solution” that does nothing, and hope voters don’t realize it until after the election.

Miller concludes, “But is the president’s plan anywhere close to seriously tackling this major national problem? No. So sorry, Mr. President. Good enough to win reelection just isn’t good enough.”

Worse, this “plan” may actually hurt colleges. The New York Times reports that some education experts “worry that by tying aid to costs,” Obama’s proposal would lead to “larger class sizes and greater use of adjuncts” and a “lower-quality college education” overall. Many public institutions which have already lost state aid could also lose federal aid, further hurting students.

Four years ago, college students propelled Barack Obama to victory. Today, they and their younger siblings are paying the price. In November, many of them will vote for the first time. With Obama’s failed record in mind, the Republican candidate is much more likely to be their pick.

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COMMENTS

  • Common_Cents

    Costs up 25%? Student loans are nearly a trillion now? Extremely high non performance rates. But good enough for a Baraka govt gig.

    I hope the Baraka hope and change fantasy was a good teachable moment for all the college students who embraced a fauxtopia campaign, our country will be better off for the lesson in the long run and hopefully in Nov.

  • renny

    I live in a cons. county (relatively, as I live in NJ), but my college students have for a couple years now just laughed if the pres’ name is mentioned, and it isn’t “funny” in-good-fun laughter,

    My students are community college enrollees so they are not the obamabots of the ivies, but they were pretty gung-ho in 2008. Now, however, there are no bumper stickers, even faculty have taken the posters off their doors, and students are interested in hearing about conservatism, if not exactly enthralled with “Republicans.”

  • APA Guy

    …and my students just roll their eyes when we speak of him, his policies, and his presidency. They don’t even laugh anymore because they no longer see the humor when they pay $4.05/gallon for 87 gas.

  • texashistorian

    in 2008 as well. Now, not so much. I teach from a conservative perspective (If I could I would assign Paul Johnson’s ‘History of the American People’ as the main text) and like you I find students a lot more receptive three years on from the Barackalypse. Not so much about Republicans, as you note, but conservative ideas.

    This tells me two things. One, Obama is going to struggle to grab the same voters he did last time around, and Two, the GOP has its head up its collective can, and has for some time. That we can have an utter trainwreck in the oval office, and yet have the Republican “brand” be almost as poorly thought of as Obama is a sorry state of affairs.

    The GOP, and this includes you Mr. Priebus, need to wake up and smell the coffee here. People WANT to hear the right message, and they WANT a reason to trust and vote for the GOP, but right now most of you are not delivering. There is a massive college age demographic that vote, and are feeling the pinch of liberal policies. What are you going to do about it?

  • funwithknives

    {Special Billionaires Issue,3/26/2012} and examine Louis Woodhill’s monograph in the *Thought Leaders* column. (pg.#44)
    Mr. Woodhill is a member of the leadership council for The Club for Growth,and condenses this topic, almost too perfectly.

    see also: Forbes.com

  • http://MichaelHarrington.org Michael Harrington

    They have few hopes of a good job right now, and they know it.

    Obama handed me a good tool to use there to gain votes. I just hope my party (nationally) does not screw it up. Do you hear me Boehner the limp?