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Tag: University of Florida

  • A Florida teacher thought she’d settled her student loan debt 20 years ago. Then she got a bill for $1 million.

    A Florida teacher thought she’d settled her student loan debt 20 years ago. Then she got a bill for $1 million.

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    For almost a decade, the government took hundreds of dollars each month out of the paychecks of a Florida woman named Michelle to recoup old student loans that were unpaid and overdue. The process, called garnishment, is legal, and the U.S. Department of Education can order it for someone’s wages, tax returns and Social Security to force repayment on defaulted loans. 

    Michelle’s garnishment began in 2008. As a public school teacher in Orlando, who asked to be identified by her first name only because this story involves her personal finances, she struggled for the next eight or nine years to make ends meet while supporting her two children.

    “I almost lost my house and everything over this because I just couldn’t afford it,” she said. And with roughly $800 per month suddenly gone, Michelle recalled at times facing impossible decisions day to day: “I’ve got to consider, ‘Do we get this meal or do we keep the lights on? Which is more important right now?’”

    After the garnishment period ended, Michelle believed that her student debts were paid in full. But, this past spring, she started receiving notices about a different loan, which she borrowed through the now-defunct Perkins Loan Program while pursuing an undergraduate degree at the University of Florida. 

    The program offered low-interest federal loans to undergraduate and graduate students with “exceptional financial need,” according to the Department of Education, and is now being phased out since officially closing in September 2017. Michelle applied for loan forgiveness through the Perkins program after graduating from the University of Florida in 1997, and later satisfied the teaching service requirements to get it. 

    So, when Michelle opened a letter from her alma mater in July suggesting that her Perkins loan repayments were “severely past due,” she was stunned. Even more confounding than the bill itself was the amount it said she still owed the school: $955,000.02.

    “I actually went into depression. I went into hiding. I didn’t know how to make sense of it because it was so long ago,” said Michelle. “So now, I’m like, I’m about to retire and I’m about to lose everything.”

    Michelle turned out to be wrong. Thanks in large part to an internet stranger with decades of expertise who eagerly offered to help sort through the student loan debacle, her situation changed almost overnight.

    Michelle’s daughter posted the letter to Reddit — a site that Michelle said she had visited “maybe twice” in her life before — in a section dedicated to discussions about student loans. The site’s users quickly tagged one member — Betsy Mayotte, the president and founder of an organization called The Institute of Student Loan Advisors, which provides a range of free services to borrowers like Michelle. 

    Michelle received a letter from the University of Florida, dated July 22, 2022, which suggested the unpaid balance on her student loans was almost $1 million.

    courtesy Michelle via Reddit


    Mayotte is a regular in the site’s r/StudentLoans subreddit, where people share personal experiences and tips as they navigate daunting repayment schedules amid changing debt relief policies under the Biden Administration, and frequently uses it to connect with people who need advice about their loans. In a comment on the original post from Michelle’s daughter, another user calls Mayotte the “GOAT,” which stands for greatest of all time.

    Mayotte, having worked before with Perkins loan borrowers who had been blindsided by unexpected bills, stepped in as a liaison between Michelle and the University of Florida. The original amount was quickly determined to be a mistake. A spokesperson at the University of Florida attributed the error to a technical issue at ECSI, a company that universities hire to act as a loan servicer for former students repaying balances through the Perkins program. 

    While the university said in a statement that it could not comment on Michelle’s case specifically, citing records protection laws for students, the school noted that “no student at the University of Florida has ever owed” nearly $1 million in student loans.

    “However, in July, the University of Florida learned that the computer system used by the company that handles billing for the university issued statements with erroneous amounts to borrowers for many schools, including UF,” the statement continued. A university spokesperson later said ECSI planned to issue new statements “reflecting the correct balances” within a week of the error coming to light. 

    A spokesperson at ECSI confirmed the calculation issue and acknowledged in a statement that the company “sent letters to a small number of borrowers reflecting incorrect amounts owed on their loans” over the summer.

    “These letters were promptly corrected and we apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused,” the spokesperson said.

    By the end of August, Michelle had received at least one of several amended statements that would ultimately come by mail from the University of Florida. The new balance still ran quite high, about $8,000, and while Michelle said she “felt better, of course, because that wasn’t a million,” she also suspected the revised number, which did not match the balance reflected in her online account, was incorrect. 

    After graduating with her bachelor’s degree, Michelle had applied for loan cancellation through a teaching program offered to Perkins loan recipients. It promised to cancel a portion of the borrower’s loan for every academic year spent teaching in certain schools, or certain subject areas. For example, someone who taught in a school serving students from low-income families, or taught special education, math, science or foreign language classes would be eligible for complete loan forgiveness. 

    Michelle fulfilled the requirements in various teaching positions held over the course of five years. She submitted the records necessary to confirm her eligibility for relief under the Perkins program guidelines, and assumed the loan was forgiven. But, when Mayotte again reached out to the university with questions about Michelle’s updated balance, she was told that Michelle’s records never arrived.

    “They said they never received it,” said Mayotte. She noted that, in her experience, miscommunication is common between Perkins loan borrowers and their loan servicers, despite company policies that technically require loan servicers to send borrowers monthly notifications about their bills, especially when they are past due. Unlike other federal student loans that are managed by vendors or servicers affiliated with the Department of Education, Perkins loan servicers have historically been the universities themselves, which then outsource loan servicing tasks to a third party.

    “I see all the time, people that say, ‘I haven’t had a bill for my Perkins loan in 10 years, 20 years,’” said Mayotte. “It makes it really difficult for the borrower. You know, a lot of times it’s a legit bill. But if it isn’t, what consumer keeps records for 20 years to be able to push back on that?”

    ECSI did not become a loan servicer for the University of Florida until the early 2000s, years after Michelle submitted her forgiveness paperwork to the school, and the company spokesperson said it “had no involvement” in the record-keeping process that determined whether or not she was granted relief.

    “Nevertheless, we were happy to assist the institution with the issues they had with this borrower and rectify the loan forgiveness,” the spokesperson said.

    Michelle, “thankfully,” per Mayotte, was able to prove her eligibility for retroactive relief through the Perkins loan teaching program. Her final balance: $408, which, she said, was paid in full as of two weeks ago. 

    “The only word I had was amen when I got that letter,” Michelle said. “I couldn’t process it completely. I was just grateful.”

    Although Michelle’s exorbitant student loan balance was a mistake, Mayotte said she has worked with a couple of clients before who really do owe close to $1 million for money borrowed to go to school. 

    A recent report published by the Education Data Initiative points to the ongoing student debt crisis in the U.S., which has proven difficult to remedy despite President Biden’s promised loan forgiveness plan — now on hold, per court order, and potentially headed to the Supreme Court. Student debt currently totals $1.745 trillion nationwide, according to the report, which places the average federal loan debt balance at just under $38,000. But, with Biden’s forgiveness plan stalled, the administration recently announced that it is extending the pause on student debt repayments until June of next year. 

    “Education, when financed by student loans, does not live up to its mantra as the ‘great equalizer,’” said Michelle in an email, adding that borrowers, particularly those who go on to work in the public sector, often “grow old with the burdens of student loans and are sometimes never, ever fully able to make future plans, to upgrade lifestyle, to save, to invest, or retire on time. The pay is generally too low — paycheck to paycheck — and the life cycle of loans last entirely too long.”

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  • Channeling Orwell, Judge Blasts Florida’s ‘Dystopian’ Ban on ‘Woke’ Instruction

    Channeling Orwell, Judge Blasts Florida’s ‘Dystopian’ Ban on ‘Woke’ Instruction

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    After his decisive victory in the Florida governor’s race last week, Ron DeSantis dubbed the Sunshine State as the place “where ‘woke’ goes to die.” But a federal judge on Thursday pushed back against that notion, blocking the State University System of Florida from enforcing through regulation a new law that puts strict limits on what professors can teach or say about race in the classroom.

    In a searing 139-page order, Judge Mark E. Walker of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida cast as Orwellian the state’s defense of the Individual Freedom Act, also known as the “Stop WOKE” Act. The order comes in response to litigation from university professors and college students, who have argued that provisions of the law prohibiting the expression of certain viewpoints, such as those related to sex and race, are unconstitutional. Defending the law, the State University System has argued that public university professors do not have free speech rights when it comes to what they teach. In his order, Walker took strong exception to that argument.

    “Defendants argue that, under this Act, professors enjoy ‘academic freedom’ so long as they express only those viewpoints of which the State approves,” Walker wrote. “This is positively dystopian.”

    Walker, who was nominated to the bench in 2012 by President Barack Obama, is known for his rhetorical flourishes. In the opening line of his order, granting in part a preliminary injunction to the plaintiffs, the federal judge quoted from George Orwell’s 1984. “‘It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen,’” Walker wrote, “and the powers in charge of Florida’s public university system have declared the State has unfettered authority to muzzle its professors in the name of ‘freedom.’”

    Under the Individual Freedom Act, professors are prohibited from “training or instruction that espouses, promotes, advances, inculcates, or compels … student[s] or employee[s] to believe” eight specified concepts. Among others, those concepts include promoting a belief that “A person, by virtue of his or her race, color, national origin, or sex is inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously.”

    Florida’s law is part of a broader conservative pushback against “woke” liberalism and critical race theory in colleges and schools. DeSantis, who is widely expected to be a contender for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024, has made these issues central to his political identity. As governor, DeSantis is empowered to appoint most members of the state’s Board of Governors, the systemwide university governing body. Under the law, it falls to the board to ferret out unchecked “wokeness” and enforce prohibitions against it. (Violations of the law could result in forfeiture of performance-based funding from the state.)

    Walker’s order, however, enjoins the board from enforcing its regulation. Jerry C. Edwards, a staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida, who represented some of the plaintiffs, said the order sent a strong signal to public colleges and the Legislature.

    “We are very happy with this ruling,” he said. “Judge Walker enjoined the Florida Board of Governors from being able to enforce this law, which he called ‘positively dystopian.’ And we totally agree that it is positively dystopian, violates the First Amendment, and is unconstitutionally vague under the Fourteenth Amendment.”

    A spokeswoman for the Board of Governors said in an email that the board had “no comment, as it is our policy not to comment on pending litigation.”

    This is at least the second case this year in which Walker has written a strong order related to First Amendment issues at public universities. In January he issued a blistering order against the University of Florida, saying it could not enforce a policy that had blocked university professors from participating in litigation against the state.

    Walker’s order on Thursday took strong umbrage at what the judge characterized as a troubling notion that the state can ban speech it does not like.

    “Defendants respond that the First Amendment offers no protection here,” Walker wrote. “They argue that because university professors are public employees, they are simply the State’s mouthpieces in university classrooms. As a result, Defendants claim, the State has unfettered authority to limit what professors may say in class, even at the university level. According to Defendants, so long as professors work for the State, they must all read from the same music.”

    Edwards, the ACLU lawyer, said Walker’s two orders signal a judicial check on efforts to encroach on professors’ speech rights. “What this ruling and the other ruling says is that the State of Florida has not been good about protecting free-speech rights on college campuses and promoting free speech on college campuses, and that the courts aren’t having it,” Edwards said. “They are pushing back and saying you need to respect the First Amendment. You need to respect academic freedom.”

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    Jack Stripling

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  • Ben Sasse’s Contract at Florida’s Flagship Has Lots of Perks. But Not Tenure.

    Ben Sasse’s Contract at Florida’s Flagship Has Lots of Perks. But Not Tenure.

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    There are plenty of goodies in Ben Sasse’s new contract with the University of Florida, where the Republican senator from Nebraska is slated to start as president on February 6.

    With final approval from the State University System’s Board of Governors on Wednesday, Sasse secured a five-year deal that will pay him $1 million annually in base salary with opportunities for bonuses. Notably absent from the contract, however, is a relatively standard provision for incoming college presidents at major research universities: tenure upon appointment.

    Sasse, who is 50 years old and holds a Ph.D. in American history from Yale University, once led a small college in Nebraska and briefly taught. But he does not bring a traditional academic résumé to the table, and granting him instant tenure may well have stirred up further controversy around his appointment. He has already been met with protests and rancor from students, professors, and staff members, who question his qualifications and his politics.

    Under Sasse’s contract, he will be appointed as a full-time faculty member “upon the end of his service as president.” At that point, he will serve “in an appropriate rank and academic department” at an unspecified salary, the contract states. The appointment is “subject to approval” by the chair of UF’s board. There is no mention in the contract of whether the position will be tenured.

    A UF spokesman declined to elaborate on why Sasse’s contract is silent on the question of tenure, and Sasse’s lawyer did not respond to an email on Thursday. Nor did UF’s board chairman.

    Broadly speaking, tenure is academe’s most coveted status, offering effectively permanent appointments to faculty members with carefully vetted records of achievement in their fields. Tenure is perpetually under fire, often criticized as a system that protects underperforming professors. But it remains a hallmark of the academic enterprise, ideally forming a bulwark against encroachments on academic freedom and offering a license for scholars to pursue controversial or unpopular ideas.

    So what does it mean for Sasse to come into the UF presidency without tenure? For starters, it tempers for now what might have been a passionate discussion about whether the president of a top-ranked public research university would qualify for tenure there. It muddies the waters, too, about the strength of Sasse’s “retreat rights,” which can afford a college president a secure tenured appointment if things don’t work out in the C-suite. Symbolically it may say something, too. The contract sets Sasse for now outside the system of tenure — a system that Sasse has pledged to defend but that nonetheless remains a favorite punching bag for his political party.

    To hear it from UF faculty members, Sasse will come into the job, after resigning his Senate seat in January, as more of a mystery than his recent predecessors. Unlike someone who rose through the ranks of academe, earning tenure along the way, there is less of a presumption that Sasse supports and appreciates academic freedom and the role that tenure plays in protecting it. That’s one reason he has probably fielded more questions than most would-be college presidents about whether he believes in those fundamental tenets.

    Last week, during a public interview with UF’s Board of Trustees, Sasse described himself as “a zealous defender of and advocate for academic freedom,” and “a defender of tenure at a research institution.” There are principled reasons for embracing those values, but Sasse also flagged for the board a “more crass, calculating” imperative to do so.

    “We want the best faculty to want to stay at this place and be recruited to this place,” he said, “and that requires that we have academic freedom and tenure. And so I look forward to advocating for those positions.”

    Sasse’s stated support of tenure “at a research institution” suggests a bit of nuance on the topic. Under Sasse’s leadership, Midland University, a Lutheran college in Nebraska, replaced traditional tenure with three-year rolling contracts, a spokesman told The Chronicle.

    While principally known for his political profile, Sasse comes to UF with more academic experience than other career politicians who have assumed college presidencies in recent years. In addition to his Ph.D. at Yale, he holds a bachelor’s from Harvard University. For two years and 10 months, ending in early 2010, Sasse was an assistant professor in the University of Texas at Austin’s Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, officials there said.

    It is reasonable to question how a self-styled “occasional professor” would fare under UF’s standard tenure evaluation. Paul A. Ortiz, a history professor at UF, said that Sasse would not meet the criteria for tenure at the university. What little faculty members know about Sasse’s academic record is thin, Ortiz said.

    “Tenure says, regardless of how good-looking Ben Sasse is, regardless of how transformative his vision is, ‘Where’s the beef?’” Ortiz said “‘Where’s the CV? Where’s the work record we can go and judge?’”

    Ortiz is chair of UF’s chapter of United Faculty of Florida, a union that represents faculty members and other employees.

    Beyond a short news release, UF has offered scant information about Sasse’s academic background. On Thursday, in response to a public-records request from The Chronicle, the university provided copies of his CV and a “profile.”

    Metrics for tenure evaluation, even for traditional academics, are sometimes the subject of intense debate. In 2019, Harvard denied tenure to Lorgia García-Peña, an associate professor of Romance languages and literatures who was widely respected in her field. The decision provoked discussions about whether universities undervalue emerging scholarship on race and ethnicity. In 2021 the Board of Trustees at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was lambasted for failing to act on a recommendation that Nikole Hannah-Jones, developer of the 1619 Project, be granted tenure.

    Given his background, Sasse might logically be appointed to a faculty slot in the history department. But no one has discussed with the department’s chair the idea of appointing Sasse there with tenure.

    “Should such a request be made, we would, I presume, follow our normal procedure of appointing a faculty committee to review the candidate’s dossier and make a recommendation for the department’s consideration,” Jon F. Sensbach, chair of the department, said in an email to The Chronicle. “Any final determination is made by the Board of Trustees.”

    But faculty members haven’t had a strong say in whether recent UF presidents were given tenure. W. Kent Fuchs, UF’s current president, and J. Bernard Machen, his predecessor, were appointed as full professors with tenure in engineering and dentistry, respectively. Both came to the job after long careers in academe, and their appointments were spelled out in their contracts.

    “Faculty approval was not required previously or now,” Steve Orlando, a university spokesman, said in an email, “but we have always sought input from faculty, students, alumni, and others in presidential searches.”

    (The search committee that recommended Sasse held numerous listening sessions, but many on campus were furious that only one finalist was made public. In October the Faculty Senate voted no confidence in the search process.)

    UF’s appointment of a sitting U.S. senator as president comes at a time when faculty members have expressed concern about political interference in university affairs. In a recent high-profile case, professors objected to the fast-tracked tenured appointment of Joseph A. Ladapo, who was Gov. Ron DeSantis’s pick as the state’s surgeon general. Ladapo, who was previously an associate professor at the University of California at Los Angeles, has been criticized for his skepticism about Covid-19 vaccines.

    Sasse’s appointment invites comparisons with other politicians turned college presidents. On the question of tenure, two recent case studies suggest different approaches. Mitch Daniels, a former governor of Indiana and soon-to-be-departing president of Purdue University, does not have a tenured appointment or the promise of one when he steps down, a spokesman said. But John E. Thrasher, a former speaker of the Florida House, told The Chronicle that he had assumed the Florida State University presidency with tenure in the law school. (Thrasher is now president emeritus of Florida State.)

    Amanda J. Phalin, chair of UF’s Faculty Senate, said in an email to The Chronicle that she expects Sasse isn’t too concerned right now about a future role on the faculty.

    “I think the contract is appropriate,” Phalin wrote. “I know he’ll be focusing on the university as a whole, including zealously defending tenure at our institution.”

    As a senior lecturer in the department of management in UF’s college of business, Phalin is untenured and works on an annual contract. She is a voting member of UF’s Board of Trustees, and she joined the board last week in its unanimous decision to appoint Sasse as president. As a result of her vote, Phalin is facing a vote of no confidence in the Senate, which is slated to take up the resolution next week. The university’s student-body president, who also voted for Sasse as an ex officio member of the board, is facing calls for impeachment.

    Granting Sasse tenure would only have inflamed tensions, said Danaya C. Wright, chair-elect of the Faculty Senate. “It would just have added fuel to the fire had they given him tenure,” said Wright, a law professor. Doing so, she said, would have been “a slap in the face to the faculty who put in all that work” to earn tenure.

    With or without tenure, Sasse’s contract offers plentiful perks. If he hits established goals, his starting base salary of $1 million will increase by 4 percent each year. Under the contract, he will be provided with housing in the Dasburg President’s House, with “utilities (including internet service), housekeeping, home-office facilities, equipment and services, landscaping, maintenance, and grounds-keeping, security, repair and maintenance of The Dasburg House and facility.” During Sasse’s term as president, tuition will be waived for members of his “immediate family,” which “is defined as the parents, children, and grandchildren of Dr. Sasse.”

    Sasse’s contract does not say he will be granted tenure — but it also does not say he won’t.

    “The way this language is structured, this is a bit of an artful dodge,” said James H. Finkelstein, a professor emeritus of public policy at George Mason University. “While it doesn’t grant him tenure, it gives an enormous amount of discretion to the board chair in terms of how to resolve that issue, should that time come.”

    Finkelstein and Judith A. Wilde, a research professor in George Mason’s school of policy and government, have reviewed and analyzed more than 300 contracts for college presidents. After reviewing Sasse’s contract, both said they were struck by the power it invested in the board’s chair to make decisions independent of the full board. It falls to the chair, for example, to approve Sasse’s future faculty appointment and salary. (The full board would be “promptly notified.”)

    Another notable clause in the contract speaks to what might happen if Sasse resigned after some scandalous transgression. If the chair determined “in good faith” that Sasse was resigning for a reason that would have been fireable for cause, Sasse would be “deemed to have declined” a faculty post or any other employment at UF. That’s a lot of power for one board member, Wilde said.

    “Once again, it’s one person making a decision,” she said. “How does he actually get into the head of Dr. Sasse to know that that’s why he’s stepping down?”

    It is not difficult to envision a scenario in which a board chair explains to a president that he or she must resign or be fired by the board. But higher education is littered with examples in which a few board members applied that kind of pressure in private, only to invite explosive public disagreement on campus and among themselves. Some notable examples include the University of Virginia and, more recently, Michigan State University.

    UF’s current board chairman, Morteza (Mori) Hosseini, is considered a particularly powerful governing-board leader.

    By definition, a president’s contract envisions worst-case scenarios: resignation, termination, even death. Despite faculty misgivings about Sasse, professors say they want to see him do well. But the learning curve will be steep, said Ortiz, the history professor.

    “Ben Sasse is going to have to take 100-level courses to figure out how UF works,” Ortiz said. “In other words, he’s got to play catch-up. We all want him to succeed. I want Ben Sasse to succeed as president of the University of Florida because it matters to my students, it matters to faculty, it matters to staff. We don’t want him to crash and burn.”

    As for tenure, Ortiz said, he’s happy to tell the new president what it’s all about: “If he called me and said, ‘Paul, tell me how tenure works,’ I would say, ‘Yeah, let’s go get a cup of coffee.’”

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    Jack Stripling

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  • Protesters Storm Ben Sasse’s Q&A Forum With Students At University Of Florida

    Protesters Storm Ben Sasse’s Q&A Forum With Students At University Of Florida

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    Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) who is reportedly the “sole finalist” to take over as president of the University of Florida, on Monday was met with loud protests during his first appearance on campus since the news of his potential appointment broke.

    Sasse held three separate sessions with university faculty, students and staff on the Gainesville campus.

    Protesters gathered outside the room where the student Q&A session was held, chanting: “Hey, hey, ho, ho. Ben Sasse has got go.”

    Protesters eventually entered the room the meeting was being held in, resulting in the forum ending 15 minutes ahead of schedule, according to the Independent Florida Alligator, the university’s student newspaper.

    During the session, Sasse addressed the demonstrations.

    “Obviously, I wish they didn’t have the position they have, but I strongly support the right people to protest and exercise their free speech rights,” Sasse said, according to The Hill. “I won’t say I precisely welcome the protesters, but I sort of intellectually and constitutionally welcome the protesters.”

    The demonstrations were sparked in part by Sasse’s conservative opinions on issues, including same-sex marriage.

    The Nebraska senator called the Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, which legalized same-sex unions, “a disappointment to Nebraskans who understand that marriage brings a wife and husband together so their children can have a mom and dad,” in a statement dated June 26, 2015.

    The statement continued: “As a society, we need to celebrate marriage as the best way to provide stability and opportunity for kids.”

    Asked on Monday whether he would stand behind the university’s LGBTQ community, Sasse replied: “Your question is: Do I support and affirm everybody in this community? Absolutely.”

    Sasse also said the Supreme Court’s same-sex marriage decision “is the law of the land and nothing about Obergefell is changing in the United States.”

    During the summer, Sasse celebrated the high court’s Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision, which overturned Roe v. Wade.

    “The pro-life movement’s work has just begun,” he said in a statement. “This issue will now be debated in the 50 states, and a 330,000,000-person, continental nation will work through this debate in a way that’s healthier than Roe’s one-size-fits-all, Washington-centrism.”

    Asked about his abortion stance, Sasse reportedly said the presidential role does not involve any decisions around the medical procedure, according to The Hill.

    Sasse also addressed how he would maintain his commitment to the prospective presidential post and avoid being drawn into politics.

    “One of the things that’s appealing about this, frankly, is the opportunity to step back from politics,” Sasse said, according to the Independent Florida Alligator.

    Sasse on Thursday emerged as the only finalist in the search to succeed current president W. Kent Fuchs, who announced his resignation in January.

    “I’m delighted to be in conversation with the leadership of this special community about how we might together build a vision for UF to be the nation’s most-dynamic, bold, future-oriented university,” Sasse wrote on Twitter.

    The university’s Board of Trustees will interview Sasse on Nov. 1. If the board approves his nomination, he will also have to be confirmed by the Florida Board of Governors.

    If Sasse becomes university president, he will have to resign from the Senate and Nebraska’s governor will appoint a replacement.

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