Chattanooga Times Free Press

GOP states sue over student loan repayment plan

- BY COLLIN BINKLEY AND JOHN HANNA

TOPEKA, Kan. — A group of Republican-led states is suing the Biden administra­tion to block a new student loan repayment plan that provides a faster path to cancellati­on and lower monthly payments for millions of borrowers.

In a federal lawsuit filed Thursday, 11 states led by Kansas argue Biden oversteppe­d his authority in creating the SAVE Plan, which was made available to borrowers last year and has already canceled loans for more than 150,000.

It argues the new plan is no different from Biden’s first attempt at student loan cancellati­on, which the Supreme Court rejected last year. “Last time Defendants tried this the Supreme Court said that this action was illegal. Nothing since then has changed,” according to the suit.

The Education Department declined to comment on the lawsuit but noted Congress in 1993 gave the department the authority to define the terms of incomedriv­en repayment plans.

“The Biden-Harris Administra­tion won’t stop fighting to provide support and relief to borrowers across the country — no matter how many times Republican elected officials try to stop us,” the department said in a statement.

Biden announced the SAVE repayment plan in 2022, alongside a separate plan to cancel up to $20,000 in debt for more than 40 million Americans. The Supreme Court blocked the cancellati­on plan after Republican states sued, but the court didn’t examine SAVE, which was still being hashed out.

The new lawsuit was filed this same week the White House hosted a “day of action” to promote the SAVE Plan. The Biden administra­tion says more than 7.7 million borrowers have enrolled in the plan, including more than 5 million who have had their monthly payments reduced to $100 or less because they have lower yearly incomes.

The challenge was filed electronic­ally in federal court in Kansas by Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach, who requested any trial be in Wichita, the state’s largest city. The lawsuit asks a judge to halt the plan immediatel­y. Along with Kansas, the suit is backed by Alabama, Alaska, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Montana, Nebraska, South Carolina, Texas and Utah.

“In a completely brazen fashion, the president pressed ahead anyway,” Kobach said during a news conference at the Kansas Statehouse. “The law simply does not allow President Biden to do what he wants to do.”

Biden’s new repayment plan is a modified version of other income-based repayment plans the Education Department has offered since the ’90s. The earliest versions were created by Congress to help struggling borrowers, capping payments at a portion of their income and canceling any remaining debt after 20 or 25 years.

The new plan offers more generous terms than ever, offering to reduce monthly payments for more borrowers and canceling loans in as little as 10 years. Unlike other plans, it prevents interest from snowballin­g as long as borrowers make their monthly payments.

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