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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRepublican Attorneys General Are Telling the Supreme Court What It Wants to Hear
B&SNebraska, along with five other states led by Republican attorneys general, are suing President Joe Biden to stop him from forgiving billions of dollars in student loan debt. The Supreme Court will hear oral argument in the case, Biden v. Nebraska, on Tuesday. How the justices resolve the case could change the lives of some 43 million eligible borrowers who are still waiting to find out whether the Court is going to let Biden govern or not.
If decisions about nationwide student loan relief sound like they should be above any one states pay grade, youre not alone in thinking so. But Nebraska, along with Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, and South Carolina, has invoked a judge-made rule called the major questions doctrine to argue that courts must stop Biden from attempting to address the student debt crisis. The doctrine allows judges to invalidate agency actions if they decide Congress didnt speak clearly enough when delegating authority over issues of great economic and political significanceso, major questionsto the executive branch. By canceling student debt, the state writes in its brief, the Biden administration claims breathtaking and transformative power beyond [its] institutional role and expertise.
This isnt the first time states have used the doctrine to urge judges to strike down laws they dont like. Last year, West Virginia successfully challenged the Environmental Protection Agencys ability to regulate carbon dioxide emissions under the Clean Air Act; writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts explained that the concept reigns in agencies asserting highly consequential power beyond what Congress could reasonably be understood to have granted. Nebraskas brief in the student debt case also cites the Courts invalidations of the Centers for Disease Controls eviction moratorium and the Department of Labors vaccine-or-test rule, making sure to place its argument in the context of other recent major questions cases. By playing into the justices naked power grab, these states are working to transform the crushing debt burden of a generation into a tax win and budget bump.
On the campaign trail in 2020, Biden pledged to eliminate undergraduate student debt for borrowers making up to $125,000 per year, and to forgive $10,000 worth of debt to help those struggling to make ends meet during the COVID-19 pandemic. Last fall, the White House revealed plans to make good on this promise, relying on its authority under the HEROES Act, a 2003 law that allows the Secretary of Education to waive or modify any law that applies to student financial assistance programs during a national emergencylike, say, COVID-19.
But according to Nebraska, Congress could not have intended to grant the president this sweeping power, because lawmakers conspicuously and repeatedly declined to enact many student-loan discharge bills in recent years.
If decisions about nationwide student loan relief sound like they should be above any one states pay grade, youre not alone in thinking so. But Nebraska, along with Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, and South Carolina, has invoked a judge-made rule called the major questions doctrine to argue that courts must stop Biden from attempting to address the student debt crisis. The doctrine allows judges to invalidate agency actions if they decide Congress didnt speak clearly enough when delegating authority over issues of great economic and political significanceso, major questionsto the executive branch. By canceling student debt, the state writes in its brief, the Biden administration claims breathtaking and transformative power beyond [its] institutional role and expertise.
This isnt the first time states have used the doctrine to urge judges to strike down laws they dont like. Last year, West Virginia successfully challenged the Environmental Protection Agencys ability to regulate carbon dioxide emissions under the Clean Air Act; writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts explained that the concept reigns in agencies asserting highly consequential power beyond what Congress could reasonably be understood to have granted. Nebraskas brief in the student debt case also cites the Courts invalidations of the Centers for Disease Controls eviction moratorium and the Department of Labors vaccine-or-test rule, making sure to place its argument in the context of other recent major questions cases. By playing into the justices naked power grab, these states are working to transform the crushing debt burden of a generation into a tax win and budget bump.
On the campaign trail in 2020, Biden pledged to eliminate undergraduate student debt for borrowers making up to $125,000 per year, and to forgive $10,000 worth of debt to help those struggling to make ends meet during the COVID-19 pandemic. Last fall, the White House revealed plans to make good on this promise, relying on its authority under the HEROES Act, a 2003 law that allows the Secretary of Education to waive or modify any law that applies to student financial assistance programs during a national emergencylike, say, COVID-19.
But according to Nebraska, Congress could not have intended to grant the president this sweeping power, because lawmakers conspicuously and repeatedly declined to enact many student-loan discharge bills in recent years.
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Republican Attorneys General Are Telling the Supreme Court What It Wants to Hear (Original Post)
In It to Win It
Feb 2023
OP
How about we stop listening to rulings from people who are evil and paid to destroy democracy.
onecaliberal
Feb 2023
#2
hibbing
(10,119 posts)1. Nebraska, on its way to become Kansas n/t
onecaliberal
(33,018 posts)2. How about we stop listening to rulings from people who are evil and paid to destroy democracy.