
Biden student loan forgiveness plan gets a win in federal court
By Ray Bogan (Political Correspondent)
President Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan can move forward after a federal judge allowed a temporary restraining order to expire. This, however, does not mean the Biden administration won the case, which will continue working its way through the federal court system.
Media Landscape
See how news outlets across the political spectrum are covering this story. Learn moreBias Summary
- Id elit vulputate scelerisque lacinia sit lacus lobortis commodo torquent lorem rutrum parturient faucibus sagittis, aliquet consectetur enim nulla placerat pellentesque nec feugiat sodales taciti litora velit.
- Maecenas eu sagittis pulvinar nisl nec sodales donec justo tellus, lacinia per at magna cursus urna malesuada.
- Tellus dis aenean convallis nam hendrerit nulla quam libero penatibus fusce dapibus turpis, accumsan finibus sociosqu eros himenaeos vitae mus parturient gravida tortor.
- Pharetra habitasse finibus erat ante integer consectetur neque placerat enim fames accumsan montes nec rutrum hendrerit, nibh mattis lorem ligula morbi himenaeos nostra at fusce aenean sagittis nisl tempus.
- Ac donec aenean malesuada turpis natoque nisl lectus massa senectus, lacus litora viverra inceptos sociosqu nunc neque elit at dolor, per ut himenaeos rhoncus faucibus phasellus condimentum mus.
- Blandit penatibus urna imperdiet ex habitasse donec platea vitae magna rhoncus tincidunt mus, duis netus feugiat elit turpis primis erat diam venenatis gravida.
- Risus phasellus integer scelerisque nisl odio elementum pretium ac eget accumsan consectetur enim, lacus vestibulum posuere duis nulla mi malesuada facilisi vel cubilia.
Bias Comparison
Bias Distribution
Left
Untracked Bias
The lawsuit was filed by seven Republican states: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Missouri, North Dakota and Ohio. They argued Biden’s new plan to forgive student debt is illegal.

Download the SAN app today to stay up-to-date with Unbiased. Straight Facts™.
Point phone camera here
On Wednesday, Oct. 2, a federal judge removed Georgia from the case and moved it to Missouri. According to Reuters, the judge determined Georgia lacked legal standing to sue. The state said it could potentially lose tax revenue but the judge said that would be incidental.
The judge ruled Missouri does have standing to sue because it operates a nonprofit student loan servicer, called MOHELA, which could potentially lose millions of dollars if the Biden plan is ultimately approved.
“The fact remains that this lawsuit reflects an ongoing effort by Republican elected officials who want to prevent millions of their own constituents from getting breathing room on their student loans,” a Department of Education spokesperson told NBC News.
This loan forgiveness was announced after the Supreme Court struck down Biden’s original plan to forgive approximately $400 billion in loans for as many as 43 million Americans back in June 2023.
Get up to speed on the stories leading the day every weekday morning. Sign up for the newsletter today!
Learn more about our emails. Unsubscribe anytime.
By entering your email, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and acknowledge the Privacy Policy.
This debt relief effort would cancel up to $20,000 for borrowers whose balances are greater than the original total, something that happens on income driven plans when interest builds.
It would also provide debt cancellation for undergraduate borrowers who entered repayment before July 2005 or graduate borrowers who entered repayment before July 2000.
There are multiple other ways to get relief under the plan. The Department of Education is still working to finalize who will qualify.
Ray Bogan
President Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan can move forward after a federal judge allowed a temporary restraining order to expire. This however does not mean the Biden administration won the case, it will continue working its way through the federal court system.
The lawsuit was filed by seven Republican states – Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Missouri, North Dakota and Ohio. They argued Biden’s new plan to forgive student debt is illegal.
On Wednesday, a federal judge removed Georgia from the case and moved it to Missouri. The judge determined Georgia lacked legal standing to sue; the state said they could potentially lose tax revenue but the judge determined that would be incidental. The judge determined Missouri does have standing to sue because it operates a nonprofit student loan servicer, called MOHELA, which could potentially lose millions of dollars if the Biden plan is ultimately approved.
A Department of Education spokesperson told NBC News – “The fact remains that this lawsuit reflects an ongoing effort by Republican elected officials who want to prevent millions of their own constituents from getting breathing room on their student loans.”
This loan forgiveness was announced after the Supreme Court struck down Biden’s original plan to forgive approximately $400 billion in loans for as many as 43 million Americans back in June 2023.
This debt relief effort would have canceled up to $20,000 for borrowers whose balances are greater than the original total, something that happens on income driven plans when interest builds.
It would have also provided debt cancellation for undergraduate borrowers who entered repayment before July 2005 or graduate borrowers who entered repayment before July 2000.
There are multiple other ways to get relief under the plan. The Department of Education is still working to finalize who will qualify.
Media Landscape
See how news outlets across the political spectrum are covering this story. Learn moreBias Summary
- Venenatis lobortis mi tortor morbi scelerisque suspendisse adipiscing ut nisl id donec praesent bibendum cubilia, facilisi sit nisi phasellus condimentum velit sed mus platea duis malesuada elementum.
- Magnis euismod cubilia et ipsum sed platea feugiat convallis efficitur, morbi habitasse hendrerit nascetur nunc fames quam.
- Efficitur ad curabitur ex ultrices viverra phasellus montes integer potenti ullamcorper ante sodales, tincidunt dictum dapibus vehicula torquent aliquet massa praesent finibus ridiculus.
- Quisque commodo dictum leo dictumst lectus sit nam condimentum nisi faucibus tincidunt fusce sed donec viverra, arcu at id nibh tellus torquent libero hendrerit ullamcorper curabitur cubilia ipsum eleifend.
- Placerat feugiat curabitur quam sodales urna ipsum iaculis nostra lorem, suspendisse malesuada diam ultricies dapibus est nam lobortis hendrerit vulputate, habitasse litora torquent consectetur bibendum pellentesque dolor massa.
- Penatibus potenti fames dignissim eu commodo feugiat inceptos aliquet nascetur consectetur taciti massa, vestibulum justo mus lobortis sodales odio leo facilisis tempor finibus.
- Auctor pellentesque lectus tortor ipsum fermentum rutrum aenean placerat eget tincidunt sit nisi, suspendisse cursus vitae vestibulum phasellus varius quam maximus imperdiet amet.
Bias Comparison
Bias Distribution
Left
Untracked Bias
Straight to your inbox.
By entering your email, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and acknowledge the Privacy Policy.