We Might Have Had Another Shooting Involving Federal Immigration Officers in Portland
Can JD Vance Be Present for Every White House Press Briefing? He Masterful...
DOGE Just Updated Its Website. Here's How Much It's Saved.
Kicking Off the Year With Press Derangement, Contradictions, and Slanted Approaches to Sob...
Rep. Emily Randall Knows Who Congress Should Really Target for Fraud, and It's...
'Is Our Children Learning:' Check Out This Sign at the Domestic Terrorist Rally...
America First Lawmakers Must Punch Back As Europe Forces Importation of Harmful Regulation...
Is America's Iraq Syndrome Over?
You Won't Believe What this Socialist CA Mayor Said About the Bondi Beach...
JD Vance Predicts a Rough Road for Democrats in 2028
DOJ Sues Two California Cities Over Natural Gas Ban in New Construction
Labtech to Pay $6.8M, Plead Guilty to Anti-Kickback Violations
U.S. House Approves Obamacare Subsidy Extension as Some Republicans Break With Party
Cincinnati Case Unseals Alleged $27M Drug Money Laundering Operation
Marriott Employee Fired After Allegedly Doxxing ICE Agents on Social Media
Tipsheet

Six States Challenge Biden’s $400 Billion Student Loan Plan

AP Photo/Evan Vucci

President Joe Biden’s $400 billion student loan forgiveness plan is not working out quite in his favor. 

Previously, federal judges have blocked the program from happening, while states are now challenging the president’s plan, which would let students walk away from being responsible for their loans. 

Advertisement

Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, and South Carolina have asked the Supreme Court to reject the Biden Administration’s request to reinstate his student debt program. 

The states argue that Biden’s false claim that it is a “Covid-related emergency” for why student loan payments need to be stopped is an “unlawful” abuse of the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students (HEROES) Act of 2003.

“The Act requires a real connection to a national emergency. But the Department’s reliance on the COVID-19 pandemic is a pretext to mask the President’s true goal of fulfilling his campaign promise to erase the student-loan debt,” the states wrote. 

In their response, the states say that Biden failed to explain how the cancellation of the student loan debt connects to a national emergency. 

“Hiding the real motive, the agency attempts to connect the Cancellation to the pandemic by citing current economic conditions supposedly caused by COVID-19. But those conditions are not directly attributable to the pandemic, so the Department has failed to adequately link the Cancellation to a national emergency,” the states said. 

Advertisement

Additionally, the six states say that the Biden Administration is trying to “assert power far beyond anything Congress could have conceived.” 

The Biden Administration now can file a reply brief. After that, it is up to the courts to issue an order. 

The Democrat has defended its program, claiming that the court’s decision to block it would leave millions of people economically in ruins. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos