Springfield News-Sun

Student loan forgivenes­s plan meets the rule of law

- Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education and host of the weekly television show “Cure America with Star Parker.”

President Joe Biden’s $400 billion 2022 election bribe — also known as student loan forgivenes­s — has been now stopped in its tracks on two fronts.

First, in Texas, federal district court Judge Mark Pittman, one of nearly 300 federal judges appointed by former President Donald Trump, ruled the initiative unconstitu­tional. The judge rejected Biden’s claim that the 2003 Heroes Act gives him authority to wipe out these loans. That act, per the judge, was about loan assistance for military personal during war or other emergencie­s.

The lawsuit was filed by the Job Creators Network Foundation on behalf of two students holding loans that did not qualify for the relief, demonstrat­ing the inequities of the initiative and the failure to provide the usual comment period for citizens.

Now, in response to six states that have sued challengin­g the legality of this loan forgivenes­s program,

FROM THE RIGHT

Ross Douthat

Star Parker

Jonah Goldberg Armstrong Williams Pat Buchanan

Marc Thiessen George Will a federal appeals court has issued an injunction blocking the program from moving forward.

The Wall Street Journal has called this loan writeoff measure “the largest presidenti­al abuse of power in decades.”

I have already written about the folly of this loan forgivenes­s program.

Private debt markets in our country work extremely well regarding loan management and defaults. The problems arise — excessive defaults — when government gets in the business of providing loans, which are inevitably constructe­d and targeted with political objectives.

And, these student loan programs simply exacerbate the real problem, which is runaway costs of college education. Over the last 20 years, escalation of the cost of college tuition and textbooks have been more than twice the U.S. average inflation rate.

Universiti­es are essentiall­y being subsidized by government programs allegedly designed to help students get higher education. But this massive loan forgivenes­s initiative is an example of the crass political opportunis­m that follows from the accumulati­on of government power.

Can it be a coincidenc­e that Biden reached out to millions with college loans, offering to wipe these loans out, just prior to elections when the outlook for his party was not encouragin­g and his own polling has been poor?

A week before the elections, Biden made remarks at the White House saying our democracy is “at risk

... democracy is on the ballot this year.”

Now that the elections produced far better results for Democrats than anyone anticipate­d, the president called the elections “a good day for democracy.”

No one ever accused Biden of being a deep thinker. But it should concern every citizen that his assessment of the state of our democracy follows from the success at the polls of his own party.

In his remarks at the White House, he stumbled onto the truth.

“We, the people, must decide whether the rule of law will prevail or whether we’ll allow the dark forces to thirst — that thirst for power put ahead of the principles (that) have long guided us.”

Fortunatel­y, as evidenced by these court decisions slamming the door on this abuse of power by our president, even conservati­ves and Republican­s who are disappoint­ed by the results of these elections can feel positive that we still have rule of law in our nation.

As Pittman wrote in his ruling, “In this country, we are not ruled by an all-powerful executive with a pen and a phone. Instead, we are ruled by a constituti­on that provides for three distinct and independen­t branches of government.”

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