Biden's Student Loan Forgiveness Was Always a Sham

Earl

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Biden's Student Loan Forgiveness Was Always a Sham

John Yoo & Robert Delahunty , law professor at the University of California, Berkeley; Washington DV Fellow of the Claremont Institute's Center for the American Way of Life On 6/30/23 at 3:34 PM EDT

How Will The Supreme Court's Student Loan Ruling Impact Borrowers?

The Supreme Court has dealt the coup de grace to the Biden Administration's student loan forgiveness program. Consistent with the Court's emphasis on the Constitution's separation of powers, the Court ruled that Congress had not granted Biden the legal authority to forgive debt amounting to perhaps $980 billion over 10 years. The Administration has repeatedly tried to short-circuit the legislative process by issuing major policy initiatives with scarcely a nod to Congress. The Roberts Court has rightly stymied its unconstitutional power grab again. Candidate Biden pledged in 2020 to cancel at least $10,000 in federal student loan debt for each borrower. In August 2022, he announced a plan that would forgive as much as $20,000 in loans for low-income Pell Grant recipients and $10,000 for all other eligible borrowers. (Eligibility was capped by the borrower's income level.) The overall cost of Biden's program is estimated to be between $300 and $980 billion—a massive impact on the economy.

The soaring cost of higher education, and the burden on student borrowers (student debt is estimated at $1.75 trillion) are serious problems. But the Constitution reserves public policy choices of that magnitude to Congress. The President cannot make an end run around this process, however urgent the need for action is. Instead, Biden's Education Department relied on a provision of the "HEROES Act," a 2003 law passed during the Iraq War. In the event of a national emergency, it allows the government to freeze, temporarily, the student loans of soldiers and their families. The law explicitly allows DoE to waive or modify student loan regulations, but only so as to ensure that service members and their families would not suffer financially because of a deployment.

> Biden's DoE found such an "emergency" ready to hand in August 2022, in the waning COVID-19 pandemic, even though Biden announced only weeks later that the pandemic was over. Both the Trump and Biden administrations had relied on the HEROES Act to temporarily suspend student debt payments, interest accruals, and collections. But the Trump Administration concluded that the Act did not authorize broad loan cancellation. The use of the Act by Biden's DoE to cancel loans was contrary to government practice and interpretation in the nearly 20 years that the Act had been on the books.
https://www.newsweek.com/bidens-student-loan-forgiveness-was-always-sham-opinion-1810253
 
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They’ve already found a decent work around in the form of adjusting Obamas IBR program which would essentially allow even more people to defer their loans indefinitely
 
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