A couple of weeks ago, Mitt Romney said something unexpected about American higher education: families worried about affording college tuition should expect no help from a Romney administration. Indeed, the former governor said students should shop around for colleges with the best rates, because Americans will be on their own.
It set up a striking contrast. On the one hand, there’s President Obama, who considers his student-loan reforms to be among his key domestic achievements, including doubling the investment in Pell Grants, and creating the “American Opportunity Tax Credit” that gave 9.4 million families a break on tuition rates. On the other, there’s his likely Republican opponent, telling students and their families, “Good luck figuring something out.”
My first reaction to this was, “Romney just lost the youth vote.” Apparently, Romney doesn’t see it that way.
For those who can’t watch clips on line, Romney said in Chicago yesterday, “I don’t see how a young American can vote for, well, can vote for a Democrat.” He added that his party is “consumed with the idea” with debt reduction, which will help alleviate burdens on young people.
Even for Romney, this is deeply strange.








