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Supreme Court readies to hear Biden’s student loan forgiveness case


Supreme Court.

Douglas Rissing | Istock | Getty Images

The Supreme Court will hear on Tuesday oral arguments over President Joe Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan, starting off a decision-making process that will impact the balance sheets of tens of millions of Americans.

The nine justices will consider two legal challenges to Biden’s plan to cancel up to $20,000 in student debt for borrowers: One from six GOP-led states (Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and South Carolina) and another backed by the Job Creators Network Foundation, a conservative advocacy organization.

Long before the president acted, Republicans had criticized loan forgiveness as a handout to well-off college graduates. They also argued that the president didn’t have the power to forgive consumer debt on his own without authorization from Congress.

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Biden’s policy has faced at least six lawsuits since it was rolled out in August. Dozens of Republican members of Congress have also filed briefs with the U.S. Supreme Court, arguing that the Biden administration’s student loan forgiveness plan should be ruled unlawful.

There’s no precedent in U.S. history for the kind of sweeping debt forgiveness that the White House has promised to deliver, although consumer advocates point out that large corporations and banks have been bailed out by the government in their own crises. And they say that canceling a large share of education debt is necessary to relieve the many borrowers struggling from a broken lending system.

“The court must see these lawsuits as the partisan sham they really are and protect the Biden administration’s historic relief plan,” said Ben Kaufman, director of research and investigations at the Student Borrower Protection Center. “Borrowers deserve better than to be treated like political pawns — lives and livelihoods are at stake.”

Here are three things to know.

1. Millions already approved for loan forgiveness

“It should take one to two weeks for the servicers to implement,” Kantrowitz said.

More than 10 million borrowers are likely also eligible for the relief, and those who didn’t already apply should have another opportunity to do so if the policy survives.

2. Justices to consider if president can cancel debt

Biden administrations stops taking applications for student loan debt forgiveness

The court’s conservatives have been very aggressive in striking down the decisions of Congress and the president.

Gregory Caldeira

political science professor at Ohio State University

Student loan borrowers were having problems repaying their debt before Covid. Only about half of borrowers were in repayment in 2019, according to an estimate by Kantrowitz. A quarter — or more than 10 million people — were in delinquency or default, and the rest had applied for temporary relief measures for struggling borrowers, such as deferments or forbearances.

These grim figures led to comparisons to the 2008 mortgage crisis, and built pressure on Biden to deliver relief.

3. Legal experts say forgiveness plan faces tough odds

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