Student loan bills will be due again soon
WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden is facing increasing pressure from Democrats to extend a pandemic-related pause to student loan repayment, pitting the White House between its restless liberal base and a growing effort from the administration to signal that life is returning to normal after nearly two years of emergency measures.
Biden has twice given an extension. Unless he is persuaded to issue another, federal student loan repayments will resume after the president’s current order expires Jan. 31.
Nationally, 45.7 million borrowers have $1.6 trillion of student loan debt, and 41 million have taken advantage of the pandemic pause on repayments, according to an Education Department spokesperson.
Progressives are leading the call for another extension as borrowers prepare to resume monthly payments early next year amid rising inflation and the threat of the new omicron variant. Average monthly payments are about $400, according to the Federal Reserve.
“We now have people who’ve never had to pay because they graduated into a pandemic in 2020,” said Melissa Byrne, a liberal activist. “You have people that are still struggling.”
Byrne on Wednesday led a protest outside the White House calling for the extension of the payment freeze and a cancellation of at least some student debt, arranging for a small marching band and choir to perform.
“I have faith in the White House not to do something stupid,” Byrne said.
The looming decision comes amid a rise in liberal frustration with the president on issues such as voting rights and the public’s increasing intolerance for extraordinary measures enacted during the pandemic.
Unlike other measures before the president that require congressional approval, extending the student loan payment freeze is the sole purview of the executive branch.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said earlier this month that a “smooth transition back into repayment is a high priority for the administration,” setting off a backlash from activists who want Biden to pause repayments and cancel student debt.
Psaki this week said Biden would happily sign a bill to fulfill a campaign promise to cancel $10,000 in student debt if Congress passes one. “They haven’t sent him a bill on that yet,” Psaki said.
But Democratic lawmakers point out that Biden does not need legislation to extend the pause on repayments, which he did in August following a standoff with his party’s progressive faction over the end to a national eviction moratorium. Progressives want Biden to issue another extension before the end of January.
“He can do it with the stroke of a pen and that’s what we’re asking for,” said Rep. Cori Bush, DMo., one of the most leftleaning lawmakers in Congress.
Republicans say while they are sympathetic to the plight of borrowers, the pause on repayments cannot continue indefinitely.
“The question really becomes at what point do you stop this or is this a permanent development?” said Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. “Someone has to explain what the end date is.”
Rubio said the pause was enacted during the initial shocks to the economy, but he argued that now there are more jobs than workers and that an extension would be misguided. He said it would be better to pass legislation to reform the student loan system as a longterm solution and that his bill would eliminate interest on federal student loans by replacing it with a flat financing fee.
“I had $100,000 of student loans, so I sympathize with it,” Rubio said. But, he added, “at some point these have to be paid back.”
Extending an emergency measure like freezing student loan payments could alarm the public, Republicans say, which sees the country as emerging from an emergency situation. The share of Americans who report being “very concerned” about the virus had dropped from 45% in September to 30% this month, according to a Monmouth University poll released Wednesday.
Rep. Jake LaTurner, RKan., whose district includes the University of Kansas, said that another extension would be counterproductive. “It’s time for us to get back to some sense of normalcy,” LaTurner said.
When Biden issued the previous extension, he called the pause a “critical lifeline” and said it ensures that Americans “don’t have to choose between paying for basic necessities or their student loan during the pandemic that upended their lives.”
The Education Department spokesperson said in the coming weeks the agency “will engage directly with federal student loan borrowers to ensure they have the resources they need.”
The Debt Collective, a national group campaigning for an extension of the pause and the cancellation of debt, said Black women will be hardest hit when payments resume.