Conservative justices question Biden’s student loan plan in crucial SCOTUS case
Written by ABC AUDIO ALL RIGHTS RESERVED on February 28, 2023
(WASHINGTON) — The Supreme Court on Tuesday began hearing arguments in two cases challenging President Joe Biden’s $400 billion student loan forgiveness program.
Critics of the Biden administration’s plan to cancel federal student loan debt for more than 40 million Americans say it’s expensive, unfair and an abuse of executive power.
As supporters of the program protested outside, Chief Justice John Roberts and other conservative justices zeroed in on the issue of executive authority and separation of powers, questioning whether Congress needed to sign off on such broad relief.
“Congress shouldn’t have been surprised when half a trillion dollars is wiped off the books?” Roberts asked Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, arguing for the Biden administration.
“We take very seriously the idea of separation of powers and that power should be divided to prevent its abuse,” Roberts added, making a comparison to the Supreme Court’s decision to block former President Donald Trump’s unilateral attempt to dismantle the DACA program for undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children.
Prelogar, in turn, argued that the education secretary has the authority to provide relief under the HEROES Act, a 2003 law aimed at ensuring federal student loan borrowers would not be economically devastated during a national emergency, in this case, the COVID pandemic.
“Well, of course, we think Congress did address this expressly here,” Prelogar said. “And Congress directed that in the context of a national emergency — that is the limitation of the HEROES Act — so the secretary can’t invoke this whenever he wants, there has to be that predicate: war or military operation or national emergency.”
The group of six GOP-led states on Tuesday challenging the program before the Supreme Court, were questioned by liberal justices to answer the critical question of how, exactly, they are harmed.
“You can’t just go to the court and say I don’t like this, or I think this might be a problem,” said David Nahmias, a staff attorney with the Berkeley Center for Consumer Law and Economic Justice. “In order to sue, you have to show that you are going to be threatened with a certain impending injury.”
The states have alleged a future financial injury from lost revenue on student-loan discharges; fewer loans on the books, they say, would mean fewer taxes to collect.
The state of Missouri argues that it would be uniquely harmed by the impact of large-scale debt cancellation on Missouri’s Higher Education Loan Authority, or MOHELA, which is the nation’s largest loan servicer.
Nebraska Solicitor James Campbell, arguing on behalf of the states, said Tuesday that the plan would cut MOHELA’s operating revenue significantly.
The Biden administration says the states’ claims are highly speculative and indirect, undermining their legal standing to bring the case in the first place.
“MOHELA isn’t here,” said Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. “It has the ability to sue and be sued; it has been set up as a separate entity. Usually we don’t allow one person to step into another’s shoes and say, ‘I think this person suffered harm’ even if that harm is very great.”
Justice Amy Coney Barrett also pressed Campbell on MOEHLA’s absence, asking, “Do you want to address why MOHELA’s not here?”
Campbell responded that MOHELA “MOHELA isn’t here because the state is asserting its interests. MOHELA doesn’t need to be here because the state has the authority to speak for them.”
“If MOHELA is really an arm of the state … why didn’t you just strong-arm MOHELA and say, ‘You have to pursue this suit?'” Barrett asked.
“The basic threshold issue is, is Missouri, is Nebraska – are these states injured today?” said South Texas College of Law professor Josh Blackman.
Lower courts and legal scholars from across the ideological spectrum have divided on the question of injury, setting the stage for the justices to have the final say on whether the Biden debt relief plan inflicts clear harm on state governments.
“The answer is tricky because in recent years the states have been given latitude,” said Blackman. “This might be a case of the court scaling back on that broad authority, although I’m not sure.”
The U.S. Education Department last year, citing a need to protect borrowers from excessive economic hardship during the pandemic, invoked emergency powers to waive repayment terms for some federal student loans. The agency offered to absolve as much as $20,000 of federal debt for more than 40 million eligible borrowers.
The move drew an immediate legal challenge from Republican attorneys general in six states — Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and South Carolina — who saw it as a costly bailout to college students at the expense of other American taxpayers.
“Joe Biden had no legal authority whatsoever. I think the larger issue is it’s unfair to people who paid off their loans. It’s unfair to people who didn’t take out loans,” Sen. Eric Schmitt, Missouri’s Republican former attorney general who first brought the case, told ABC News in an interview.
“It’s adding to our debt,” Schmitt added. “I think the reason why this case is before the Supreme Court and why Missouri and the other states are ultimately going to win is because Missouri has a loan servicing organization called MOHELA that derives revenue from interest.”
MOHELA, a state-created company which manages more than 5 million federal student loan accounts totaling $148 billion, is at the heart of Missouri’s case and what the federal appeals court singled out as a lynchpin in their decision.
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals based in St. Louis, which put the Biden debt relief plan on hold last year, cited “threatened financial harm” to Missouri explicitly because of its ties to MOHELA.
MOHELA has contributed $6 million to state student aid programs in the current fiscal year, a spokeswoman for the Missouri Department of Higher Education and Workforce Development told ABC.
State law also requires MOHELA to pay $350 million to help fund improvements to state colleges and universities.
“The court has identified it as a public entity that administers student loans. It provides college assistance programs for people across the state of Missouri and so the state has an interest in it,” MIssouri’s new attorney general Andrew Bailey told ABC in an interview.
But liberal and conservative legal scholars say financial fallout from a MOHELA-Missouri link is too weak and speculative to justify the states’ Supreme Court case.
“The relationship between Missouri and MOHELA, as our research has shown, in the law that created MOHELA, is such that harm just cannot, cannot happen,” said Nahmias, who filed an amicus brief in the case on behalf of Missouri consumer advocates.
“MOHELA is completely separate and distinct from the state of Missouri. Its operations are distinct from Missouri. Its treasury and finances are completely walled off from the Missouri treasury,” he said.
MOHELA, which did not respond to our repeated requests for comment or an interview, is notably not challenging the Biden loan forgiveness plan.
Missouri Rep. Cori Bush says the company is being used as a pawn and that allegations fewer MOHELA-serviced loans would financially harm her state is exaggerated.
“The money that [MOHELA is] supposed to be paying to the state – again, they owe over, what, about $105 million – they have not kept that up,” Bush said in an interview. “So to say that you have borrowers who need to pay what they owe. Well, MOHELA does not pay what they owe.”
MOHELA financial records reviewed by ABC News confirm the loan servicer has not made a payment to the state fund for higher education capital improvements since 2008 and may not make any future payments – even if the Biden debt relief plan is struck down.
“The states have shown no link between debt cancellation and the effect of debt cancellation on MOHELA’s effect to even pay into the fund, even if they wanted to,” said Nahmias.
Asked about MOHELA’s lack of contributions, Attorney General Bailey said it’s “an issue that the [Supreme] Court is going to have to sort out.”
“The Fifth Circuit [U.S. Court of Appeals] sided with us on this issue, and so we’re optimistic about our chances at the U.S. Supreme Court,” he said.
Some top conservative legal scholars, however, have warned the justices in court filings that – while they don’t like the debt cancellation plan – allowing Missouri to challenge it could set a dangerous precedent.
“If these states are granted standing here, it could lead to far broader ability of the states to haul the federal government into court,” Blackman said.
It’s a high-stakes decision that many say will turn on whether the justices believe debt relief for millions of Americans hurts MOHELA, which in turn hurts Missouri.
“The court may very well say, look, no money’s been paid out [by MOHELA] in a very long time. This is too speculative of an injury,” Blackman said. “Or, the court could say the chance that even $1 might be paid at some point in the future might be enough” to establish harm.
Meantime, many of nearly half a million Missourians with federal student loans who applied for relief under the Biden plan are watching the case with anticipation.
“I spend a lot of time worrying about how I’m going to pay that money back,” said Anna Bain, a sophomore journalism major at the University of Missouri-Columbia, holding $12,000 in student debt.
“The soaring costs of higher education these days is so insane and so unacceptable for so many people,” Bain said. “I think that everyone has a right to say how their taxes are being spent. But I feel like taxes are for the greater good and this is for the greater good.”
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