Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Taxpayers group files suit to block student loan forgivenes­s plan

- Kelly Meyerhofer

A conservati­ve Wisconsin law firm on Tuesday sued to overturn President Joe Biden’s plan to cancel up to $20,000 in student debt for millions of borrowers, the latest in a flurry of lawsuits nationally that allege the move is unfair and unwise.

The Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty, also known as WILL, filed the lawsuit against Biden and the U.S. Education Department in U.S. District Court in Green Bay on behalf of the Brown County Taxpayers Associatio­n. The taxpayers associatio­n promotes limited government and includes more than 100 members who pay federal taxes and are “on the hook” to pay for Biden’s plan.

“Student Loan Debt Relief takes from one group of people and arbitraril­y distribute­s the spoils to another group,” Brown County Taxpayers Associatio­n President Rich Heidel said in a statement. “The Plan amounts to nothing more than a modern-day version of King George III’s Stamp Act where there was massive taxing and spending without participat­ion of the People’s representa­tives.”

The White House plan would cancel up to $10,000 in federal student loan debt for borrowers who earn less than $125,000 per year, or less than $250,000 for married couples, or up to $20,000 for those who received federal Pell Grants.

An estimated 40 million borrowers nationally would be eligible for relief, including 685,100 borrowers in Wisconsin . More than 300,000 Wisconsin borrowers could see their entire balances go to zero under the plan, according to the Biden administra­tion.

The applicatio­n for borrowers to apply for loan forgivenes­s is expected to be rolled out sometime this month.

WILL has asked the court to immediatel­y block that from happening while the legal battle unfolds “to prevent something quite irreversib­le and damaging.”

WILL alleges that Biden doesn’t have unilateral power to forgive student loans without Congressio­nal approval and that the forgivenes­s program was created with racial motivation­s in violation of the “equal protection doctrine,” which requires the government to treat an individual in the same manner as others in similar circumstan­ces.

The White House has said its plan will “advance racial equity” and “help narrow the racial wealth gap.” Research shows that borrowers of color carry more debt and face higher risk of default.

White House and Education Department

officials in calls with reporters over the past month have repeatedly said the administra­tion has clear authority to forgive student loan debt during the pandemic, citing a law passed in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks that gives the education secretary broad authority to overhaul student loan programs during a war, military operation or national emergency.

“Republican officials are standing with special interests to try to keep millions of borrowers under mountains of unmanageab­le student loan debt,” a White House spokespers­on told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “The pandemic impacted individual­s from all background­s and communitie­s — from small towns, rural communitie­s, big cities and everywhere in between. The administra­tion’s actions will support those most at financial risk of default or delinquenc­y when loan payments resume, with 90% of the benefits going to people earning less than $75,000 per year.”

WILL found the federal government’s justification for the program “laughable.”

“The President has no authority to order a wholesale forgivenes­s of student loan, costing taxpayers up to a trillion dollars,” WILL president Rick Esenberg said in a statement. “Whether this plan is good for America is for Congress

to decide. We understand the procedural challenges but we can’t stand idly by while the President shreds our separation of powers. This can’t become the new normal for Democrats or Republican­s. We will fight for the rule of law and take this issue all the way to the United States Supreme Court if necessary.”

University of Pennsylvan­ia economists estimate the plan could cost more than $1 trillion. The Education Department’s calculatio­n was much lower, with officials last week saying it would cost taxpayers about $379 billion over the life of the program. The Congressio­nal Budget Office estimated the plan would cost $400 billion.

The group’s lawsuit is the latest to seek to stop the program from taking effect. One of the biggest roadblocks for Republican­s seeking to overturn it has been finding someone who can show they have “standing” before the court, or the grounds to sue.

An Indiana man sued on the basis that his debt cancellati­on would push up his state tax bill because Indiana plans to tax federal debt relief as a form of income. The White House responded by noting that anyone who does not want to get debt relief can opt out.

Republican attorneys general in six states last week also sued.

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