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Jill Stein presidential campaign, 2016/Education

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Jill Stein announced her presidential run on June 22, 2015.[1]



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Jill Stein
Green presidential nominee
Running mate: Ajamu Baraka

Election
Green Party National ConventionPollsDebates Presidential election by stateBallot access

On the issues
Domestic affairsEconomic affairs and government regulationsForeign affairs and national security

Other candidates
Hillary Clinton (D) • Donald Trump (R) • Gary Johnson (L) • Vice presidential candidates

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This page was current as of the 2016 election.


See below what Jill Stein and the Green Party Platform said about education.

CANDIDATE SUMMARY
  • Stein supported a "student bailout" to cancel student loan debt.
  • She opposed high-stakes testing and the privatization of public schools.
  • Stein advocated for tuition-free education from pre-school through college.
  • Green Party Stein on education

    • A video recorded earlier in 2016 of Jill Stein discussing technology and education gained renewed attention on August 1, 2016, because of comments she had made about the safety of wireless technology. “We should not be subjecting kids’ brains especially to that. And we don’t follow that issue in this country, but in Europe where they do, they have good precautions around wireless—maybe not good enough, because it’s very hard to study this stuff. We make guinea pigs out of whole populations and then we discover how many die. And this is like the paradigm for how public health works in this country and it’s outrageous, you know,” she said.[2]
    • In an interview on the Fox Business Network, Jill Stein detailed her proposal for a student bailout by having the Federal Reserve cancel the debt. She said it would be tax-free and would cost less than the bank bailout. “Actually, if you count the quantitative easing for the bankers, that was an additional $4.5 trillion, which is far more than we need for student debt which is $1.3 trillion,” she said.[3]
    • On July 5, 2016, Jill Stein released the web video, “Abolish Student Debt.” In the ad, Stein says, “We will bail out millennials and others in student debt. We did it for the crooks on Wall Street – it’s about time to do it for the millennials and the generation held hostage in debt.”[4]
    • On May 31, 2016, during an interview with Rolling Stone, Jill Stein discussed her plans to eliminate student debt. Stein said, “We are the only campaign that will cancel student debt and bail out [those with student loans] like Obama did for Wall Street. Isn't it about time we bailed out the young people? Therein is how we move forward, because that's 43 million people who don't need to be persuaded, they just need to learn that they have an option to come out and cancel their debt by voting Green. That could actually take over the election: 43 million is a winning plurality in the presidential race. This is mainly to say that the potential for our campaign can be a real positive force. Potentially even a dominating force if the generation in debt gets on to this.”[5]
    • Jill Stein expressed solidarity with the Million Student March Against Racism and Student Debt in an email on April 13, 2016. “I’m supporting the Million Student March Against Racism and Student Debt, taking place at campuses across the country, because burdening young people with crushing debt holds back not only their personal potential, but the potential of our entire society,” she wrote.[6]
    • During a July 6, 2015, phone interview conducted by On The Issues, Stein was asked about Common Core and national education standards and testing. She said, "In general, high stakes testing is more than counterproductive--it is destructive. It is used as a political tool against teachers--targeting low-income and people of color. Our educational system should target lifetime learning--with full and equitable funding; and eliminating disparities by race. Testing for diagnostic purposes as part of standards [is ok, but we should have] curriculum written by teachers--not by corporate contractors."[7]
    • On her 2016 presidential campaign website, Stein advocated for education as a right: "Abolish student debt to free a generation of Americans from debt servitude. Guarantee tuition-free, world-class public education from pre-school through university. End high stakes testing and public school privatization."[8]
    • In a November 29, 2015, interview with The Harvard Crimson, Jill Stein discussed her proposal to make “all public colleges free” and erase “all existing student debt.” She said, “Forty million young people are indentured servants without much hope of getting out of debt. We have a generation of hopeless young people who cannot get their way out of debt, who don’t have jobs, and who are watching the climate collapse.”[9]
    • Stein joined the Boston-area “Million Student March” on November 12, 2015, to demonstrate for the right to a free college education.[10]
    • In an interview with teleSUR published November 3, 2015, Stein said she would “abolish student debt, which can be done with the stroke of a pen and is really critical for liberating an entire generation of youth who are essentially indentured servants right now with no hope of change on the horizon” in her first 100 days of office if elected president.[11]
    • In a January 2012 interview with Steve Horn of Truth Out, Stein said, "We will provide tuition-free higher education, since it's comparable to a high school education in the 20th century - you need a higher education degree in the 21st century economy and it should be provided as a basic right."[12]

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    Footnotes