The US Department of Education was taking action to begin cancelling debts as soon as this week, according to seven Republican-led states that filed a lawsuit on Tuesday to contest President Joe Biden’s administration’s most recent plan for student debt forgiveness.
The lawsuit came less than a week after the US Supreme Court rejected the Biden administration’s bid to revive a different student debt relief plan that was designed to lower monthly payments for millions of borrowers and speed up loan forgiveness for some.
In a lawsuit filed in federal court in Brunswick, Georgia, state attorneys general aimed at a rule the Education Department proposed in April that would provide for a waiver of federal student loan debts for an estimated 27.6 million borrowers.
Attorneys general from states including Georgia and Missouri say they recently obtained documents showing the Education Department has instructed federal loan servicers to begin cancelling hundreds of billions of dollars of loans as early as either Tuesday or Saturday before the rule was finalized.
That could lead to the overnight cancelation of at least $73 billion in loans, the lawsuit said, and billions in further debt relief could follow. The states argue the Education Department has no authority to carry out such debt forgiveness.
“We successfully halted their first two illegal student loan cancelation schemes; I have no doubt we will secure yet another win to block the third one,” Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey said in a statement.
The Education Department and White House did not respond to requests for comment. The lawsuit is the latest legal challenge to the Democratic president’s efforts to fulfill a campaign pledge and bring debt relief to millions of Americans who turned to federal student loans to fund their costly higher education.
Republican-led states successfully convinced the 6-3 conservative majority US Supreme Court in June 2023 to block a $430 billion program championed by Biden that would have canceled up to $20,000 in debt per borrower for up to 43 million Americans.
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