New York Post

NIX JOE LOAN ‘GAMBIT’

‘Cancel cancellati­on’

- By JOSH CHRISTENSO­N

Three Republican senators are moving to overturn President Biden’s “gambit” to have taxpayers forgive around $400 billion in student loans, as the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority still weighs a separate ruling on the debt cancellati­on.

GOP Sens. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, John Cornyn of Texas and Joni Ernst of Iowa announced Friday that they plan to introduce a resolution to thwart Biden’s plan, which would cancel up to $20,000 in student loan debt per person for tens of millions of borrowers.

“This would block President Biden’s political gambit from driving up inflation, incentiviz­ing universiti­es to raise tuition, and forcing hardworkin­g Texans to pay off the debts of wealthy graduates,” said Cornyn, who sits on the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

“The Biden administra­tion’s tuition bailout is bad public policy, and it’s unfair to people who’ve paid their college debt off by working multiple jobs or consciousl­y meeting their obligation­s.”

The move follows a Government Accountabi­lity Office report also released Friday, which found Congress has the authority to overturn the loan forgivenes­s plan.

“President Biden’s student loan scheme does not ‘forgive’ debt, it just transfers the burden from those who willingly took out loans to those who never went to college, or sacrificed to pay their loans off,” said Cassidy, who is the ranking GOP member of the Senate HELP Committee.

“Where is the relief for the man who skipped college but is paying off his work truck, or the woman who paid off her loans and is now struggling to afford her mortgage? This resolution prevents these Americans, whose debts look different from the favored group the Biden administra­tion has selected, from picking up the bill for this irresponsi­ble and unfair policy.”

Biden’s loan forgivenes­s policy would cost taxpayers $400 billion over the next three decades, the Congressio­nal Budget Office determined last year.

The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in February for two cases — Biden v. Nebraska and Department of Education v. Brown — that would also settle the fate of the controvers­ial education policy.

The court’s conservati­ve majority expressed skepticism in those cases that Biden could wipe away the billions of dollars in federal student debt.

“We take very seriously the idea of separation of powers and that power should be divided to prevent its abuse,” Chief Justice John Roberts told Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar.

The conservati­ve justices appeared to lend more credence to arguments made by six states, which said the White House bypassed congressio­nal approval.

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