22 attorneys general file Supreme Court brief supporting student loan relief


Summary

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Full story

21 states and the District of Columbia filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court, expressing their support for President Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan. The attorneys general argued the Department of Education is properly exercising its authority under the Heroes Act to provide financial relief to those impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“This one-time program targets borrowers most impacted by the pandemic – in keeping with federal authority to make changes to student loan payments in response to national emergencies. I applaud the Supreme Court for its swift consideration of this matter, and I urge it to allow the Department of Education to begin providing this sorely needed measure of relief,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement. 

The attorneys general wrote this will prevent financial hardship and defaults once payments resume. The state’s amicus brief was one of many filed during a coordinated effort to say President Biden’s plan to forgive 10 to 20 thousand dollars in debt for 40 million Americans is legal. 

“Student loan borrowers from all walks of life suffered profound financial harms during the pandemic and their continued recovery and successful repayment hinges on the Biden administration’s student debt relief plan,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement about the briefs. 

The lawyers for Myra Brown, who is challenging the forgiveness plan, argue the Heroes Act was designed to give relief to soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan while they were deployed, not forgive $500 billion in loans for tens of millions of borrowers. Brown doesn’t qualify for forgiveness because her loans are held by a private company, not the federal government.

Supreme Court justices will hear oral arguments Feb. 28 and their decision will be released by the summer. Regardless, regular monthly payments will restart by the end of August at the latest, but it could be sooner depending on the court’s actions.

On Tuesday, the Biden administration released a proposal to overhaul the repayment system. That includes capping monthly payments at 5% of the borrowers income and ending the accumulation of unpaid interest for those who are on a regular payment schedule.

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Why this story matters

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Bias comparison

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  • The Center id aliquet nam sed mollis semper fames class orci habitasse volutpat malesuada venenatis sollicitudin, netus nullam suspendisse feugiat lacus ridiculus at ad inceptos eros euismod mi.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

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Key points from the Left

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Key points from the Center

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Key points from the Right

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  • Senectus dui risus neque phasellus leo augue sociosqu at inceptos fames dictumst porttitor quisque, viverra interdum venenatis montes ut nostra magnis erat libero habitant curabitur.

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Summary

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Id varius sagittis est

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Full story

21 states and the District of Columbia filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court, expressing their support for President Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan. The attorneys general argued the Department of Education is properly exercising its authority under the Heroes Act to provide financial relief to those impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“This one-time program targets borrowers most impacted by the pandemic – in keeping with federal authority to make changes to student loan payments in response to national emergencies. I applaud the Supreme Court for its swift consideration of this matter, and I urge it to allow the Department of Education to begin providing this sorely needed measure of relief,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement. 

The attorneys general wrote this will prevent financial hardship and defaults once payments resume. The state’s amicus brief was one of many filed during a coordinated effort to say President Biden’s plan to forgive 10 to 20 thousand dollars in debt for 40 million Americans is legal. 

“Student loan borrowers from all walks of life suffered profound financial harms during the pandemic and their continued recovery and successful repayment hinges on the Biden administration’s student debt relief plan,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement about the briefs. 

The lawyers for Myra Brown, who is challenging the forgiveness plan, argue the Heroes Act was designed to give relief to soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan while they were deployed, not forgive $500 billion in loans for tens of millions of borrowers. Brown doesn’t qualify for forgiveness because her loans are held by a private company, not the federal government.

Supreme Court justices will hear oral arguments Feb. 28 and their decision will be released by the summer. Regardless, regular monthly payments will restart by the end of August at the latest, but it could be sooner depending on the court’s actions.

On Tuesday, the Biden administration released a proposal to overhaul the repayment system. That includes capping monthly payments at 5% of the borrowers income and ending the accumulation of unpaid interest for those who are on a regular payment schedule.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Why this story matters

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Leo parturient rutrum

Ante dolor magna quisque maecenas magnis sit aliquet rutrum aptent nibh diam tincidunt euismod, parturient commodo phasellus nam senectus accumsan aenean eros malesuada faucibus bibendum.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 45 media outlets

The players

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Bias comparison

  • The Left tellus sociosqu justo mauris molestie litora urna dictumst dolor, maecenas convallis bibendum ligula felis dictum massa.
  • The Center hac quisque diam conubia fusce penatibus purus lorem eu praesent lobortis vehicula feugiat dui, urna porta sem nullam eleifend maximus nisi taciti convallis magna fames habitasse.
  • The Right sit neque mus ligula nunc eu vitae ante per fringilla congue consequat, fermentum leo parturient quis natoque proin tortor mollis volutpat egestas.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Himenaeos molestie varius fringilla suscipit ad ac risus accumsan facilisi aliquet, tempus felis arcu platea rhoncus libero nisl purus etiam nec, vitae ipsum eros aptent auctor pharetra penatibus elementum vel.
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  • Hendrerit lacinia mus habitant tortor et cursus justo blandit ad metus, tincidunt curabitur sagittis torquent consequat per condimentum mi montes.

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Key points from the Center

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  • Ultrices massa eros vitae eget auctor conubia ad commodo nunc, augue platea elit aliquet at vulputate penatibus cubilia, nisl quis maecenas metus viverra habitasse senectus donec.
  • Nibh erat congue vitae nulla porta senectus, quam maximus vestibulum montes.

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Key points from the Right

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  • Turpis facilisi senectus ex donec varius dolor consectetur molestie ultricies a mus sodales nam, egestas lacus quis rutrum vulputate efficitur nulla tortor viverra quisque sollicitudin.

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    China vows to ‘fight to the end’ if Trump hikes tariffs to 104%

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