美国政府要求最高法院恢复学生贷款救济计划
US Government Asks Supreme Court To Reinstate Student Loan Relief Plan

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/us-government-asks-supreme-court-reinstate-student-loan-relief-plan

8月13日,美国政府要求最高法院恢复因巡回法院裁决而被推迟的价值约4750亿美元的学生贷款救助计划。 在此上诉之前,美国第八巡回上诉法院在持续的法律挑战期间暂时中止了学生贷款援助 ​​(SAVE) 计划的某些内容。 SAVE 计划的资格标准将减少数百万合格借款人的每月贷款付款,并加快特定个人的贷款减免。 SAVE 缩写于去年首次推出,代表“Saving on a Valuable Education”。 已有超过八百万人参加了该计划。 然而,自最高法院于 5 月份驳回拜登总统早些时候提出的 4000 亿美元学生贷款减免倡议以来,SAVE 计划仍悬而未决。 最近,第八巡回法院认为,作为对该计划提出异议的几个州之一,密苏里州可能会认定该战略违反了重大问题原则,要求法官假定国会没有向行政机构分配重大决策任务。 因此,司法干预目前阻止联邦实体消除贷款余额或利息,搁置防止进一步贷款应计利息的功能,并推迟允许根据收入减少或零每月分期付款的规定。 早在六月,密苏里州地区法官约翰·罗斯就叫停了 SAVE 计划。 现在,副检察长 Elizabeth Prelogar 声称 SAVE 方法构成了美国教育部法定权力的常规实施。 她补充说,大规模的暂停阻碍了预定的修改并产生了持续的模糊性和不确定性,对众多借款人和该部门本身产生了不利影响。 如果最高法院拒绝废除第八巡回法院的限制令,普雷洛加建议在今年秋季晚些时候安排口头听证会,以减轻无数公民遭受的过度困难。 此外,最近提交的材料表明,德克萨斯州也希望继续推进之前旨在阻止 SAVE 计划的诉讼。 这些进展发生在不同司法管辖区对类似案件做出的截然不同的裁决之际。 密苏里州总检察长安德鲁·贝利尚未就政府的最新申请做出回应。

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原文

Authored by Matthew Vadum via The Epoch Times,

The federal government urged the Supreme Court on Aug. 13 to reinstate a $475 billion student loan relief plan after an appeals court ruling blocked key parts.

The new emergency application filed by Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar came after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit on Aug. 9 temporarily paused parts of the SAVE plan while the litigation over it continues. The case is Biden v. Missouri.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh directed Missouri, which is challenging the plan, to respond by 4 p.m. on Aug. 19.

The SAVE plan that Education Secretary Miguel Cardona first proposed in August 2022 would lower monthly payments for millions of eligible borrowers and accelerate loan forgiveness for some borrowers. SAVE is an acronym that stands for Saving on a Valuable Education. A reported 8 million borrowers have signed up for the program.

The SAVE plan was not yet finalized in June 2023 when the Supreme Court struck down President Joe Biden’s previous $400 billion student loan forgiveness plan in Biden v. Nebraska.

Days ago, the Eighth Circuit found that Missouri and six other states challenging the plan would likely be able to prove the plan violates the major questions doctrine.

The doctrine requires courts to presume Congress does not delegate important policy questions to government agencies.

The injunction temporarily prevents the federal government from forgiving principal or interest on outstanding student loans, blocks a provision stopping interest from accruing on loans, and pauses a provision allowing borrowers to make very low or zero monthly payments geared to income.

District Judge John Ross in Missouri previously blocked the SAVE plan on June 24.

In the new application, Prelogar argues the plan is “a straightforward exercise” of the Department of Education’s authority under federal law.

“The Eighth Circuit’s injunction has severely harmed millions of borrowers and the Department by blocking long-planned changes and creating widespread confusion and uncertainty,” she said.

The injunction is so broad that it interferes with the department’s other programs that forgive student loan debt but are not in dispute.

“That extraordinary injunction has scrambled the Department’s administration of loans for millions of borrowers,” she said.

Prelogar said if the Supreme Court decides not to reverse the Eighth Circuit’s injunction, it should consider holding oral arguments in the case this fall “to avoid prolonging the harm the Eighth Circuit’s injunction is inflicting on millions of Americans.”

The new application came after Texas Solicitor General Aaron Nielson told the Supreme Court on Aug. 10 that Texas wanted to press on with its own previously filed application to halt the SAVE plan. That case is Alaska v. Department of Education.

Although the Eighth Circuit’s injunction halting aspects of the SAVE plan gave the state much of what it wanted, the ruling left some questions unanswered, such as whether the department violated the federal Administrative Procedure Act by giving the public an unusually short period to comment on the plan before it was finalized.

The Eighth Circuit’s injunction conflicts with the Tenth Circuit’s June 30 order pausing a ruling by District Judge Daniel Crabtree of Kansas who blocked parts of the plan. The Tenth Circuit’s ruling allows geared-to-income repayments by borrowers to begin.

The Epoch Times reached out to Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey for comment on the federal government’s new application but did not receive a reply by publication time.

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