The Guardian (USA)

US supreme court to hear Biden effort to reinstate student debt relief plan

- Reuters

The US supreme court on Thursday agreed to hear Joe Biden’s attempt to reinstate his plan to cancel billions of dollars in student debt after it was blocked by a lower court in a challenge by six states that have accused his administra­tion of exceeding its authority.

The justices deferred taking action on the president’s request to lift an injunction issued on 14 November by the St Louis-based eighth US circuit court of appeals blocking the program, but said in a brief order that they would hear oral arguments in the case in their session that runs from late February to early March.

The challenge to the Democratic president’s policy was brought by Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and South Carolina. Five of those six states are Republican governed while the other, Kansas, has a Republican attorney general.

The policy faces another hurdle as the administra­tion contests a separate 10 November ruling by a federal judge in Texas deeming the program unlawful. A federal appeals court on Wednesday declined to put that decision on hold, and the administra­tion has said it plans to ask the US supreme court to intervene.

Biden announced in August that the US government would forgive up to $10,000 in student loan debt for borrowers making less than $125,000 a year, or $250,000 for married couples. Students who received Pell grants to benefit lower-income college students will have up to $20,000 of their debt canceled.

During the 2020 presidenti­al campaign, Biden promised to help debtsaddle­d former college students, but his program has drawn opposition from Republican­s. The Biden administra­tion has said that more than 26 million borrowers have applied for loan relief and 16m applicatio­ns have been approved for discharge if allowed by the courts.

The White House and a spokespers­on for Nebraska attorney general Doug Peterson, a Republican whose office is taking the lead on the challenge, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office in September calculated that the debt forgivenes­s program would cost taxpayers about $400bn.

The state challenger­s said the federal government oversteppe­d its authority to order debt cancellati­on under a 2003 law called the Higher Education Relief Opportunit­ies for Students Act, which can “waive or modify” student financial assistance during war or national emergency.

The Biden administra­tion justified its plan based on the economic harms inflicted by the Covid-19 pandemic and concerns about rising debt delinquenc­y and lower earnings, particular­ly among lower-income Americans.

Biden and his predecesso­r, Republican former president Donald Trump,

had invoked the law to pause student loan repayments. Biden on 22 November extended the repayment pause to no later than next 30 June to give the supreme court time to decide the case.

A federal judge dismissed the challenge brought by the states for lacking legal standing, but the eighth circuit subsequent­ly blocked the program while it hears an appeal by those challenger­s. The Biden administra­tion took the dispute to the supreme court, saying the eighth circuit decision leaves borrowers “uncertain about the size of their debt and unable to make financial decisions with an accurate understand­ing of their future repayment obligation­s”.

The states urged the court to reject Biden’s request, calling his program a “pretext to mask the president’s true goal of fulfilling his campaign promise to erase student-loan debt”.

 ?? ?? The US supreme court has agreed to hear the Biden administra­tion’s request to overturn a lower-court injunction blocking its student debt program. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/ Getty Images
The US supreme court has agreed to hear the Biden administra­tion’s request to overturn a lower-court injunction blocking its student debt program. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/ Getty Images

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