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Supreme Court tackles Biden student loan plan


Student loan debt holders take part in a demonstration outside of the White House staff entrance to demand that President Biden cancel student loan debt.

Jemal Countess | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

The fate of the Biden administration’s sweeping student loan forgiveness plan now rests with the Supreme Court.

That may be bad news for borrowers, say legal and higher education experts.

“The court’s conservatives have been very aggressive in striking down the decisions of Congress and the president,” said Gregory Caldeira, a political science professor at The Ohio State University. “I would not be surprised if the court invalidated the executive order.”

Higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz agreed.

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“The U.S. Supreme Court is more likely than not to block the president’s student loan forgiveness plan,” Kantrowitz said.

The highest court decided to take the case after the U.S. Department of Justice filed an emergency application asking the justices to lift the injunction on its forgiveness plan that had been issued by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, in St. Louis, at the request of six GOP-led states.

The justices, who will decide whether or not the president’s debt relief policy causes harm to the plaintiffs or is an overreach of executive authority, said they would hear oral arguments in February.

Ruling will settle ‘for now’ student loan challenges

President Biden announces student loan debt relief plan

Why the Supreme Court may block forgiveness

Striking down forgiveness will add to growing skepticism that the conservative justices vote for conservatives.

Dan Urman

a law professor at Northeastern University

If the president’s plan is blocked, he added, it will be “another example, along with abortion and guns, of the court taking positions that a majority of Americans oppose.”

In a poll conducted by The Economist and YouGov in August, 51% of respondents said they support Biden’s loan relief plan. Around 40% oppose the initiative.

“In the past, the Supreme Court usually ruled in line with public opinion,” Urman said.

Arguments over the limit of presidential power

Yet a group of borrower advocacy groups, in a recent brief to the U.S. Supreme Court, said student debt forgiveness was essential to the country’s recovery from the pandemic.

The public health crisis exacerbated the financial difficulties for “borrowers who have, for decades, been at the mercy of a broken student loan system,” they wrote.

Without cancellation, they warned, “working and middle-class borrowers are at substantial risk of default.”

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