法官暂停拜登/哈里斯政府未公布的取消更多学生债务的计划
Judge Pauses Biden/Harris Admin's Unpublished Plan To Cancel More Student Debt

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/judge-pauses-bidenharris-admins-unpublished-plan-cancel-more-student-debt

一些共和党领导的州提起诉讼,阻止拜登总统免除数百万借款人部分学生贷款债务的提议。 他们认为,这项名为“B 计划”的提案超出了美国教育部进行如此大规模取消的权力。 法院下达了临时限制令,暂停执行 B 计划直至 9 月 18 日,同时进一步审理此案。 该计划旨在为因累积利息而负债超过最初借款的个人以及其他各种类别的人(例如长期还款计划参与者、其他贷款减免计划的接受者以及受学校影响的人)免除大量债务 关闭或经济困难。 拜登总统此前曾尝试过类似的措施,但被法院叫停。 批评者声称这些尝试绕过了国会并违反了现行法律。 牵头诉讼的州总检察长包括安德鲁·贝利(密苏里州)、梅里克·加兰(阿拉巴马州)、莱斯利·拉特利奇(阿肯色州)、阿什利·穆迪(佛罗里达州)、克里斯·卡尔(佐治亚州)、道格·彼得森(北达科他州)和戴夫·约斯特(俄亥俄州) 。 The Education Department hasn't commented on the matter yet。

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原文

Authored by Bill Pan via The Epoch Times,

A federal judge in Georgia has temporarily blocked the Biden administration from implementing its latest plan to bring widespread federal student loan cancellation for up to 30 million borrowers.

The 14-day restraining order was handed down Sept. 5, two days after a coalition of seven Republican-led states preemptively sued to stop the plan, claiming that the federal government is “unlawfully trying to mass cancel hundreds of billions of dollars of loans” and planning to do so by Sept. 7.

The plan in question, popularly known as “Plan B,” has been in the works since last summer, when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the initial effort by the Biden administration to offer a blanket cancellation of up to $400 billion in student loans. It has yet to be published, although borrowers were asked last month to confirm whether they want to opt-out.

According to the U.S. Department of Education, Plan B would primarily benefit those who owe more than they originally borrowed due to accrued interest. It would erase up to $20,000 beyond the principal balance, regardless of the borrower’s income. Some 23 million may even see their entire interest balances eliminated.

The Education Department could also forgive the debt of those who have been repaying for at least 20 or 25 years, those who qualify for loan forgiveness under other programs but haven’t applied, and those who attended schools that lost access to federal aid, suddenly closed, or left graduates financially worse off.

A fifth category of borrowers would get their debt forgiven based on certain “hardships” that persist after other benefits are exhausted, such as medical debt and expensive child care. The specifics are still under review.

The seven-state coalition, led by Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey, argued that the Education Department lacks the rule-making authority to cancel debt at such a large scale. It noted that the department’s income-driven loan repayment program, dubbed SAVE, is also halted while an appeals process over its legality plays out.

“This is the third time the Secretary has unlawfully tried to mass cancel hundreds of billions of dollars in loans,” their complaint read.

“Courts stopped him the first two times, when he tried to do so openly. So now he is trying to do so through cloak and dagger.”

Judge J. Randal Hall of the Southern District of Georgia sided with the states. His order paused Plan B pending a Sept. 18 hearing.

“Plaintiffs show a substantial likelihood of success on the merits given the rule’s lack of statutory authority,” the judge wrote.

Bailey welcomed the decision, calling it a “huge victory” for Americans who have already paid off their student loans or didn’t go to college at all.

“I paid for my education in blood, sweat, and tears in service to my country, so this fight is personal for me,” he said in a statement.

“We will continue to lead the way for working Americans who are being preyed upon by unelected federal bureaucrats in Washington D.C.”

The lawsuit is joined by the attorneys general of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, North Dakota, and Ohio.

The Education Department didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

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