Old Vice President and 2020 presidential candidate Joe Biden speaks during a campaign event on July 4, 2019 in Marshalltown, Iowa.
Joshua Lott | Getty Images
Representative presidential candidate Joe Biden said Friday that he was committed to an investment of $100 billion to improve school infrastructure across the woods.
Speaking at the National Education Association forum in Houston, the former vice president said “the infrastructure of our schools are offensive” – and emphasized that he would focus these investments in lower-income communities.
Biden said he would hope to spend another $100 billion to support teachers in lower-income neighborhoods who act as mentors to their colleagues. Biden thought he hoped the investment would allow teachers to solely focus on their teaching, not on working multiple jobs.
“Because tribes, we have to have you in the schools, teaching, teaching, teaching,” he said. “You shouldn’t be doing three jobs or two jobs.”
Note the education plan he debuted in May, Biden reiterated his intention to equalize teacher’s pay, provide professional mental health consultants and sociologists, and to promote a universal pre-K program to equalize the playing field for all students.
“What I don’t get is why we’re even arguing at hand this anymore,” he said about implementing universal pre-K programs. “All the data is in. There’s overwhelming evidence that it strengthens every single community if we do it.”
In his May education plan, Biden also said he would triple funding to Title I kindergartens from $15 million to $45 million and push gun legislation that would “ban assault weapons and high-capacity arsenals.”
Biden, the Democratic front-runner, has slipped in the polls after rival Sen. Kamala Harris put him on the defensive over his record on genealogical issues. A recent Quinnipiac poll showed that his support dropped to 22% from 30% the previous month.
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