USA TODAY US Edition

Kavanaugh, Barrett may be key to cases

Trump appointees ask about standing, words

- John Fritze

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority sent a clear signal this week that President Joe Biden’s student loan forgivenes­s plan is in peril. But even as they agree with the prediction, some observers are putting an asterisk on it.

Two asterisks, to be precise: One next to Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett and the other alongside Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

During three-and-a-half hours of oral argument Tuesday in the two student loan cases, both former President Donald Trump appointees lobbed tough questions at Biden’s attorney. But they also posed unexpected questions more favorable to the administra­tion – and that makes both jurists worth watching when the court hands down its decision later this year.

When is the Supreme Court decision date on student loan forgivenes­s?

⬤ The Supreme Court is weighing two challenges to Biden’s $400 billion student loan forgivenes­s plan, which would wipe away up to $20,000 in debt for some.

⬤ Following the oral arguments, the justices will cast tentative votes in private and the most senior justice in the majority and minority will assign opinions for their side. Drafts of those opinions circulate among the justices, a process that usually takes more than three months. In this case, a decision is expected before July.

⬤ Barrett posed a number of questions suggesting she could side with the court’s three-member liberal wing on standing, that is whether the plaintiffs were actually injured by the plan. Kavanaugh, at one point, questioned why one word in the law – “waive” – didn’t give the administra­tion the power to forgive student loans.

Why Barrett’s questions about standing could matter

Six conservati­ve states that challenged the Biden plan argued, in part, that a state-created entity known as MOHELA that services student loans would lose revenue if the debt was forgiven. MOHELA, a quasi-state agency in Missouri, directs some of its money back to the state. Missouri sued, in part, based on the potential loss of revenue.

There’s just one problem with the states’ argument: MOHELA itself didn’t sue.

“If MOHELA is really an arm of the state...all of this would be a lot easier,” Barrett said. “If MOHELA is an arm of the state, why didn’t you just strong arm MOHELA and say ‘you’ve got to pursue this suit’? ”

The question is key because if the court rules the states and borrowers were not harmed by the policy, it would hand Biden a narrow win. Barrett sided with Biden in two earlier emergency cases challengin­g the student loan plan – presumably on similar questions about standing.

“Barrett, along with the three liberal justices, seemed deeply skeptical that any of the parties have standing,” said Adam Minsky, an attorney, author and expert on student debt. “I do think there is a possibilit­y the Biden administra­tion could prevail if there are five justices who agree...that the challenger­s don’t have standing.”

But given the court’s 6-3 conservati­ve compositio­n, even if Barrett decided to join with the court’s liberals on standing, they would need one more vote for a majority. Based on the arguments Tuesday, it’s not clear where that fifth vote would come from.

“I would not be surprised if she voted to find that no one has standing in either case,” said Thomas Berry, editor-inchief of the Cato Supreme Court Review. “The key question is whether there is a potential fifth vote to find that no party has standing.”

Why court observers are talking about Kavanaugh’s question

Kavanaugh, at one point, asserted that “some of the finest moments in the court’s history were pushing back against presidenti­al assertions of emergency power.” Some of its “biggest mistakes,” he then added, were when it didn’t.

But Kavanaugh also returned to the language of the law, which allows the Department of Education to “waive or modify” loan provisions after an emergency, like the COVID-19 pandemic. Why, Kavanaugh asked the states’ lawyer, didn’t “waive” authorize Biden’s plan?

“That is an extremely broad word. In 2003, Congress was very aware of potential emergency actions in the wake of Sept. 11 and war, possible terrorist attacks, and yet it put that extremely broad word, ‘waive,’ into the statute,” he said.

But just like Barrett on standing to sue, even if Kavanaugh sided with the court’s liberals on the issue of Biden’s authority to implement the plan – a big “if ” – one more vote would still be needed for a majority.

“As Kavanaugh noted more than once, Congress used an ‘extremely broad word’ when it gave the education secretary the authority to ‘waive’ provisions related to student debt,” said Smita Ghosh, appellate counsel Constituti­onal Accountabi­lity Center. “

 ?? MEGAN SMITH/USA TODAY ?? Protesters gather outside the Supreme Court on Monday ahead of the oral arguments in two cases that challenge President Joe Biden's $400 billion student loan forgivenes­s plan.
MEGAN SMITH/USA TODAY Protesters gather outside the Supreme Court on Monday ahead of the oral arguments in two cases that challenge President Joe Biden's $400 billion student loan forgivenes­s plan.

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