Glen Sturtevant, a public figure and commentator, posted a series of tweets on November 19 and 20, 2025, criticizing political messaging ahead of the 2026 midterm elections and raising concerns about student loan debt in the United States.
On November 19, Sturtevant commented on an unnamed individual’s conduct at a public event. He wrote, “Get this guy off the podium. This is not it, man. There really is no good answer for this other than corruption.”
Later that same day, he questioned the strategy behind current political communications related to the upcoming elections. In his tweet from November 19, Sturtevant stated: “Not sure how you mount a winning 2026 midterm campaign with this messaging. The folks being protected must really have something on these guys. It’s hard to come up with a reasonable, non-corrupt explanation for this behavior. Whomever is being shielded from exposure must be”
The following day, Sturtevant shifted focus to economic issues faced by American citizens, specifically those with significant student loan debt. On November 20 he tweeted: “Plus they have $100k+ in student loan debt that can’t be discharged in bankruptcy. Corporations get bailouts. Wall Street gets bailouts. Foreign countries get bailouts. American citizens never get a bailout.” Student loans are typically not dischargeable through bankruptcy except under rare circumstances such as undue hardship—a legal standard that has proven difficult for most borrowers to meet.
The discussion around student loan forgiveness has been ongoing in U.S. politics for several years, with proposals introduced by both parties but limited large-scale relief implemented so far.

