联邦法官延长对拜登政府最新学生贷款减免计划的冻结
Federal Judge Extends Freeze On Biden Admin's Newest Student Loan Forgiveness Plan

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/federal-judge-extends-freeze-biden-admins-newest-student-loan-forgiveness-plan

美国地区法官延长了一项临时限制令,阻止拜登政府最新的学生贷款减免计划(即“第三次大规模取消规则”),原因是担心该计划在没有充分公开通知的情况下实施。 包括密苏里州在内的七个州已起诉教育部长米格尔·卡尔多纳 (Miguel Cardona)、教育部和拜登总统,称教育部长希望在不遵守法律的情况下注销 730 亿美元的学生贷款。 法官的决定是在有关各方就相互竞争的动议进行激烈辩论后做出的,原告寻求初步禁令,辩方试图驳回此案。 延期让法院有时间在就该问题做出最终决定之前审查所有论点。 该诉讼源于 9 月 3 日向美国佐治亚州南区地方法院提起的诉讼。 这项新举措的实际成本可能达到 1,469 亿美元,从而增加了 SAVING 教育计划等先前举措的总体成本估算。 第八巡回法院此前曾以违反重大问题原则为由,阻止实施另一个名为“SAVE”的类似计划。 这一法律原则表明,政府只有在获得国会明确授权的情况下才应实施重大政策。 最高法院拒绝推翻第八巡回法院的裁决,允许案件继续向前推进。 当前案件的起因是,有人声称教育部长在推出第三次大规模取消规则期间试图秘密绕过法律要求。

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原文

Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times,

A federal judge has extended the restraining order blocking the Biden administration’s latest student loan forgiveness initiative, referred to in court filings as the “Third Mass Cancellation Rule.”

This extension follows allegations from a coalition of states claiming that the program is being implemented secretly without proper public notice or approval.

In the ongoing lawsuit led by Missouri against the Department of Education, U.S. District Judge Randal Hall ruled on Sept. 19 that there was “good cause” to prolong the temporary restraining order—which he initially issued earlier in the month—by an additional 14 days.

The extension follows a hearing where both sides presented arguments on competing motions—the plaintiffs seeking a preliminary injunction and the defendants pushing for the case’s dismissal.

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey called the decision a “huge win” in a Sept. 18 social media post following the judge’s in-court decision, which was formalized in the order issued the following day.

In his written order, the judge explained that the extension allows the court time to thoroughly review the arguments presented in briefs and oral submissions before ruling on the broader motions.

The case stems from a lawsuit filed on Sept. 3 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia by seven states: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Missouri, North Dakota, and Ohio.

The complaint names Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, the Department of Education, and President Joe Biden as defendants. The states allege that documents reveal Cardona is “unlawfully trying to mass cancel hundreds of billions of dollars” in student loans and has “quietly” instructed federal contractors to start the cancellation process as early as Sept. 7, potentially wiping out as much as $73 billion overnight, with further cancellations to follow.

The complaint further alleges that the real cost of the “Third Mass Cancellation Rule” program could reach $146.9 billion, adding to the $475 billion estimated cost of the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) program that Cardona first proposed in August 2022.

“This is the third time the Secretary has unlawfully tried to mass cancel hundreds of billions of dollars in loans,“ the states’ complaint reads.

”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.”

The plaintiffs allege that Cardona’s third attempt at loan forgiveness is both the most aggressive and the least legally defensible.

Unlike prior attempts—such as with the SAVE plan, in which there was at least some transparency and litigation pauses—this latest move allegedly bypasses legal requirements, such as the 60-day notice rule, according to the complaint.

The Biden administration’s first attempt to cancel student loans was blocked when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against using the Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions (HEROES) Act to authorize debt forgiveness.

The second attempt, related to the SAVE Plan, was halted by an Aug. 9 decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, which the Supreme Court declined to overturn later in August.

The SAVE program aims to reduce monthly payments for millions of eligible borrowers based on their income levels and to accelerate student loan forgiveness. An estimated 8 million borrowers signed up for the program. Under SAVE, borrowers with lower incomes could qualify for significantly reduced or even zero monthly payments, while accrued interest on these loans would no longer be charged.

However, the Eighth Circuit found that Missouri and the other states challenging the program are likely to succeed in their claim that the SAVE plan violates the major questions doctrine. This legal principle requires courts to assume that government agencies cannot make significant policy decisions—especially those with far-reaching economic impacts—without clear authorization from Congress.

As a result, the Eighth Circuit issued a temporary, nationwide injunction that halts the federal government’s ability to forgive student loan principal or interest under the SAVE plan. The injunction also suspends the provisions that prevent interest from accruing on loans and those that allow borrowers to make reduced or zero payments based on their income.

The Supreme Court declined to reinstate the SAVE plan, leaving the case to proceed in the lower court, where the case remains pending. Most recently, on Sept. 10, the court granted the solicitor general of Missouri more time to file briefs in the case.

The Department of Education did not respond to The Epoch Times’ request for comment by publication time.

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