Lodi News-Sentinel

White House weighs $10,000 student loan forgivenes­s

- Nancy Cook, Jarrell Dillard and Emma Kinery

WASHINGTON — The White House is considerin­g forgiving at least $10,000 in student loans per borrower through executive action, according to people familiar with the matter, with momentum increasing as President Joe Biden seeks ways to bolster voter enthusiasm ahead of the November midterms.

The move would come with considerab­le risks. Some deficit hawks worry it could worsen the inflation that is already weighing heavily on Democrats’ chances of maintainin­g control of the House and Senate. But any move may not go far enough to appease progressiv­es and other advocates.

The administra­tion has not yet settled on the proposal’s contours, but aims for the relief to be targeted to lower- and middle-income individual­s, according to people familiar with the internal discussion­s. Biden himself confirmed Thursday that he plans to do something, but said he is not weighing $50,000 in forgivenes­s per borrower.

That figure has been pushed by House progressiv­es and Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, along with several advocacy and civil rights groups. Former top

Warren aides, including Julie Margetta Morgan and Bharat Ramamurti, now hold top jobs inside the Biden administra­tion, working on the issue at the Department of Education and National Economic Council.

The president proposed canceling $10,000 per borrower during the presidenti­al campaign, but his White House has been slow to follow through on his promise. It has extended a temporary freeze on student debt payments that was enacted in the earliest days of the pandemic, a move that has allowed it to kick the can down the road on the issue.

When debt payments were frozen in 2020, it was part of a wider effort to prop up demand in the pandemic slump. That rationale doesn’t apply now, with the Federal Reserve battling soaring inflation and trying to rein in spending, not boost it.

Aides say the president had hoped Congress would take legislativ­e action and his team has been divided on the merits of broad student debt forgivenes­s.

The White House is looking for ways to excite progressiv­es and other crucial voter groups before the midterms, where lackluster polling for Democrats shows the party faces an uphill battle against a supercharg­ed Republican base.

Canceling student debt polls tremendous­ly well with voters under the age of 45, particular­ly young men who may have borrowed money for community or technical college, said Celinda Lake, president of Lake Research Partners, a firm that works with Democratic candidates and interest groups and advised the Biden presidenti­al campaign. A Morning Consult/Politico poll from early April showed that 47% of those surveyed called student debt relief a top or very important issue.

Forgivenes­s of $10,000 per borrower — the floor of what Biden is considerin­g — would clear loans for 15 million of 46 million borrowers.

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