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The Courts Government United States

US Supreme Court Rejects US Student Loan Relief. President Biden Responds (cnn.com) 365

After a three-year pause, U.S. student loan repayments are set to resume on October 1st — just three months from today. But CNN reports that yesterday America's Supreme Court "struck down President Joe Biden's student loan forgiveness program, blocking millions of borrowers from receiving up to $20,000 in federal student debt relief."

"The court's 6 to 3 conservative majority held that the secretary of education did not have that authority under existing law," writes the Washington Post. The Guardian quotes President Biden's response: "I think the court misinterpreted the constitution."

CNN reports: No debt had been canceled, even though the Biden administration had received about 26 million applications for relief last year and approved 16 million of them. The forgiveness program, estimated to cost $400 billion, would have fulfilled a campaign promise of Biden's to cancel some student loan debt. But a group of Republican-led states and other conservative groups took the administration to court over the program, claiming that the executive branch does not have the power to so broadly cancel student debt in the proposed manner.

Critics also point out that the one-time student loan forgiveness program does nothing to address the cost of college for future students and could even lead to an increase in tuition. Some Democrats joined Republicans in voting for a bill to block the program. Both the Senate and the House passed the measure, but Biden vetoed the bill in early June...

The administration estimated that roughly 20 million borrowers would have seen their entire federal student loan balance wiped away.

UPDATE: CNBC reports the administration hasn't given up: President Joe Biden suggested on Friday that he was looking for another avenue to deliver student debt relief after the Supreme Court rejected his forgiveness plan.

"Today's decision has closed one path," Biden said during a briefing Friday. "Now we're going to pursue another."

A statement from the White House also points to other relief policies for students, noting for example that now "no one with an undergraduate loan has to pay more than 5 percent of their discretionary income." CNN reports: New rules set to take effect in July could broaden eligibility for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program, which is aimed at helping government and nonprofit workers. And a new income-driven repayment plan proposal is meant to lower eligible borrowers' monthly payments and reduce the amount they pay back over time. The administration said this plan was finalized Friday and borrowers will be able to take advantage of it this summer, before loan payments are due. The Department of Education has also made it easier for borrowers who were misled by their for-profit college to apply for student loan forgiveness under a program known as borrower defense to repayment, as well as for those who are permanently disabled. Altogether, the Biden administration has approved more than $66 billion in targeted loan relief to nearly 2.2 million borrowers....

[T]he Biden administration said Friday that it will provide a 12-month on-ramp period for borrowers reentering payment... Borrowers will not be reported to credit bureaus, be considered in default or referred to collection agencies for late, missed or partial payments during the on-ramp period, according to a fact sheet from the White House.

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US Supreme Court Rejects US Student Loan Relief. President Biden Responds

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  • by coop247 ( 974899 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @09:56AM (#63648546)
    It is against my religion to work for student loan collectors.

    Also the bible says any debt over 7 years old is automatically forgiven.
  • by m0gely ( 1554053 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @10:28AM (#63648586)
    If the student loan cannot fall under bankruptcy protection, then the degree must be a fixed priced (averaged per state), according to a calculation including income potential and other relevant details. This would be irrespective of the institution and its prestige. And repayment should be extended with monthly payments reduced as needed (with oversight) for borrowers in danger of default. Otherwise, charge all you want. But make it bankrupt-able. Private schools (art, et al) need to have forced financial reforms. My child applied to CalArt three years ago and got accepted. Would have been $260k for an undergrad back then, but itâ(TM)s through private loans with very little to no financial aid. Many students get a loan for year 1 and canâ(TM)t get a loan for subsequent years. So massive debt with no degree. Disney must be proud. No, my child didnâ(TM)t go.
    • The government has taken over higher educational borrowing as the only lender. That's why they can't allow bankruptcy: they're a party to the original agreements. If government kept out of the educational loan business as they used to, then bankruptcy wouldn't be a problem.

      • by chill ( 34294 )

        No. You're probably thinking of in 2010, when President Obama signed the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act [bankrate.com], which eliminated the Federal Family Education Loan Program by requiring all federal student loans to be Direct Loans, offered by the government's William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program.

        The change to bankruptcy law [savingforcollege.com] making it all-but-impossible to discharge student loan debt was made in 1976 -- decades earlier.

        In 1984, the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984 further t

  • by caseih ( 160668 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @10:33AM (#63648594)

    Seems like lately all political sides like to complain that the constitution is misunderstood when rulings go against them. The president is dead wrong to say this. He can think it, and say that in private to his cabinet and advisors, but to say that publicly? That's not good. I've noticed the last few presidents have made manyinappropriate statements like this. Obama commenting on the judicial process with regards to the police killings and black lives matter, for example. And Trump, well, nearly every thing he said was inappropriate. To say these kinds of things feeds the division and distrust among Americans of different stripes. It suggests, inappropriately, that if a decision is not in line with your personal beliefs, it therefore must be wrong and thus the system that supports it is wrong, and people who support it are wrong and should be literally fought against (civil war really). Burn it all down until everyone comes around to my point of view.

    As for constitutionality, the court's message to the Biden administration is clear: if you want to forgive student loans, congress must pass a law to do it. That is the correct and constitutional way to do it.

    Personally I think many, many students have been taken advantage of by predatory lenders and for-profit degree purveyors, and that loan forgiveness is a good idea which will actually benefit the entire economy and country by allowing them to be productive participants, rather than fail under the load of debt. The secondary educational system is quite broken in the US when compared to other countries. But I recognize that many/most do not see it this (my) way.

    • Presidents have sulked publicly about Supreme Court ruling since forever. FDR's New Deal was resisted by the court for some years until the grim reaper allowed him to get a more compliant court. What's happening now is that liberals, having indulged in imposing their agenda from the bench for the past 90 years, are discovering what it's like when the Court follows the other side's agenda. The result is a serious breakdown in legitimacy in the US political system, and this is getting really really scary.

  • OK, Mr. President. In which way precisely has the court "misinterpreted" the Constitution?

    Here, let me help. Here's the full text of the opinion: https://www.supremecourt.gov/o... [supremecourt.gov]

    "The issue presented in this case is whether the Secretary has authority under the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act of 2003 (HEROES Act) to depart from the existing provisions of the Education Act and establish a student loan forgiveness program that will cancel about $430 billion in debt principal and affect nearly all borrowers." (Emphasis added.)

    Are you saying your plan doesn't depart from the existing provisions of the Education Act? Are you saying you aren't establishing a brand-new program?

  • last laugh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by groobly ( 6155920 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @11:37AM (#63648750)

    Biden still had the last laugh, because the only real purpose of this was to get him elected and placate his left wing. It worked, proving again that no one ever lost money underestimating the intelligence of the American voter.

  • by S_Stout ( 2725099 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @12:12PM (#63648872)
    You want to get a six figure loan for an English degree? Fine. Pay off the loan. Stop trying to get out of paying it. You borrowed money and now you must pay it back.
    • Yeah bullshit to that. Bankruptcy exists for a reason.

      Why do corporate boot lickers think companies should get special protection for giving unwise loans in this particular case?

  • One more fun fact (Score:4, Informative)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @12:18PM (#63648892)
    The person who brought this lawsuit had absolutely no standing whatsoever in the Supreme Court ignored that. So much for the rule of law. She also had 44,000 forgiven and PPP loans. I don't see nearly as much coverage let alone outage of the 2.5 trillion dollars in PPP loans were given to wealthy business people as I do for kicking a little bit of money to the kids to restore the subsidies that were gutted back in the early 2000s.

    Seriously the student loan that forgiveness doesn't even make up for all the subsidies that were taken away back then. They were direct subsidies to the universities passed on to the students in the form of low cost tuition so everybody acts like they didn't exist. I was there when they were being taken away and I remember the college newspapers talking about them and how tuition was going to be over 10K in about 15 years. Literally no one else talked about it
  • The Supremes ruled that the President did not have the authority under existing law.

    The answer, of course, is for Congress to pass a law.

    Of course the problem is then 535 people would have to actually show their support (or lack thereof), rather than do all this at arms length--meaning you'd have Democrats and Republicans actually voting up or down (rather than just bitching on Twitter). Meaning they'd have to put their money where their mouths are.

  • Sure to be a story here on Slashdot when the new birth rate stats come out - Please remember your opinion today on this article.
  • Did you guys not learn from The Simpsons 'Trash of the Titans', Season 9 Episode 22? Nothing is free, and asking Bob the truck driver to pay for Billy's college sociology degree is as unfair as it gets. Common man! When did everyone get so stupid?

  • by organgtool ( 966989 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @01:19PM (#63649010)
    As helpful as debt relief would be for the many college graduates suffering from it, we really need to do something to fix the problem at its root. I joked when I graduated college 20 years ago about how tuition went up $1,000 per year every year and that it would cost me $25,000 more per year to send my future children to college. At least I thought I was joking, but that actually turned out to be an underestimate! There is no reason college should cost as much as it does. At numerous universities, there is one administrator per 1.5 students! That number doesn't include professors, that's just "administrators".

    I know giving college students access to nearly infinite amount of money was done to prevent talented people from missing out on the opportunity to get a great education (and to prevent society from missing out on their contributions), but the result is that colleges just raised their tuition to absorb all of the money being offered through government-subsidized loans. I don't claim to know exactly what the solution should be, but given that many other countries can provide a similar level of education for far less money, we could start by seeing how they do it.
  • I must admit I am somewhat conflicted about student loan relief. On the one hand, it's not a bad idea, especially for those newly minted professionals in jobs that are vital and we as a nation want more people to pursue, such as K-12 education or for those people who have been ripped off by private colleges like—dare I say it?—Trump University. But, on the other hand, I went through grad school on student loans and I paid them off—and early. I feel a kind of a resentment brewing here.

  • by _0x0nyadesu ( 7184652 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @02:01PM (#63649096)

    The feds will give you 22% of your installation costs to put up solar panels and a battery. On top of that if you take out that 600k mortgage and pay 18k in interest per year they will even let you write off that entire 18k on your federal taxes. In other words if you own a house the government is basically giving you free money constantly.

    A house is an asset.
    A college degree is an asset.

    Why do we give free money for owning one but not the other?

    I'll just sit here eating my popcorn watching ya'll try to justify why we should keep having people paying a bank to discharge a loan instead of the rest of the economy.

  • USA (Score:2, Insightful)

    by fabriciom ( 916565 )
    the nation of I don't give a shit about your problems unless you are a corporation. Lets rescue banks, fuck the ppl. The end.
  • by msauve ( 701917 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @03:25PM (#63649262)
    >President Biden's response: "I think the court misinterpreted the constitution."

    Biden has been in the federal government forever, in both the legislative and executive. He has a law degree. How is he so stupid to not understand that the ruling wasn't based on Constitutional issues, but statutory interpretation?
  • America's culture of avaricious capitalism (especially in education and healthcare) will eventually cause it to consume itself, once its drug of natural resources and foreign exploitation finally runs out. These thrashings back and forth are pointless, we're watching the beginning of the end.
    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      So our completely consistent capitalistic culture that has made us the wealthiest country in the world will fail any second now? Can you be more specific as to when? I'd like to put it on my calendar.

      Don't get me wrong, healthcare and education both have issues over here but all you sound like is someone who has a stick up their butt about the US.

  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @04:04PM (#63649350)

    The short version:

    Biden and Team Democrat lied their asses off about forgiving student loans knowing full well they didn't have the authority to do so.
    Since, in the short term it gave them lots of votes, they went with it anyway.

    Fast forward a bit and the Supreme Court officially tells Biden and the Gang to piss up a rope, they don't have the authority. Request denied.

    Cue lots of staged anger and grandstanding from not only Politicians but the voters who were gullilble enough to believe the lie in the first place. Resort to the usual tactic of blaming everyone but themselves and promising to turn it into another election year lie that people will believe in all over again for the purpose of buying their votes :|

    It's hard to see this when you're a young adult because you haven't been lied to enough times over the years. As you age, you'll eventually see the patterns and become just as jaded towards Politicians and Politics in general as the rest of us.

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Saturday July 01, 2023 @09:36PM (#63649976) Journal

    Because I'm pretty sure that even His Highness cannot cancel private debts, so we're actually talking about using taxpayer dollars to pay for stuff that people agreed to pay for themselves.

    That's why they were called LOANS, not GIFTS.

    In short, he promised something he's not legally entitled to deliver.
    That doesn't mean our job now is to give him that power. That would be dumb.

    (And to be clear,,I have 4 kids with a total of over $100k in remaining loans.)

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