Democrat Joe Biden tacks left, backs Warren bankruptcy plan with student loan relief

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Democratic candidate Joe Biden's decision to endorse Warren's bankruptcy plan shows she and Bernie Sanders have moved the party's policy discussions to the left.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

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WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden has endorsed former rival Elizabeth Warren's plan to reform consumer bankruptcy laws including allowing relief of student loan debt, incorporating proposals by the party's progressive wing into the moderate front runner's campaign.
"I've endorsed Elizabeth Warren's bankruptcy proposal, which... allows for student debt to be relieved in bankruptcy and provides for a whole range of other issues," Mr Biden said in a digital town hall in Illinois last Friday (March 13).
Ms Warren, a US Senator from Massachusetts, suspended her campaign March 5 after a poor showing in primaries that week.
That left the more centrist Mr Biden and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, a democratic socialist, in the contest for the Democratic nomination to run against Republican President Donald Trump in November.
Mr Biden's decision to endorse Mr Warren's bankruptcy plan is significant, showing she and Mr Sanders have moved the party's policy discussions to the left. It also would reverse portions of a strict bankruptcy law that Mr Biden himself championed when he was a senator.
Mr Warren, who drew passionate supporters, has so far declined to give her highly valuable endorsement to either Mr Biden or Mr Sanders. She and Mr Sanders have been allies on the party's left wing, and many of his supporters called on her to back Mr Sanders as he fights to revive his campaign after moderates coalesced around Mr Biden.
Her bankruptcy proposal would also do away with restrictive rules that forced people earning more than the median in their state to file for a more onerous form of bankruptcy protection.
It would waive fees for low-income people filing for bankruptcy and hasten the process for seeking protection from credit card debt.
Many provisions her plan would eliminate were enacted in a 2005 Bill that Mr Biden backed which tightened bankruptcy rules for consumers and made it much harder to discharge student debt.
The former vice-president was then a Senator from Delaware, where several financial services and credit card companies are located.
Allies of Mr Sanders and Ms Warren have been pressuring Mr Biden's team to adopt progressive proposals like a wealth tax, a stepped up estate tax and an equal pay plan, according to several individuals familiar with talks between the campaigns.
Mr Biden and Mr Sanders are set to participate in a televised debate on Sunday, and a key question will be whether Mr Sanders comes out swinging or focuses on pressing Mr Biden to adopt policies he champions, such as a government-paid healthcare plan.
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