Student debt relief advocates gather outside the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2023, ahead of arguments over President Joe Biden’s student debt relief plan.

The Supreme Court of the United States heard the much-anticipated oral arguments Tuesday in two challenges to President Joe Biden’s plans to cancel student loan debt for millions of borrowers. Over nearly four hours of colloquy with counsel, the justices appeared were far more focused on how to sidestep deciding the program’s legality than in analyzing its merits.

In Biden v. Nebraska, six states with Republican attorneys general sued and argued that the HEROES Act is not a proper legal basis for the plan. A trio of Republican-appointed judges for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit temporarily halted the program in October 2022 while litigation proceeded. Immediately thereafter, the Biden administration asked the justices to step in, but the justices refused to do so in a brief unsigned order on Dec. 1, 2022.

The companion case, Department of Education v. Brown, was filed in Texas by two student-loan borrowers, neither of whom fully qualifies to participate in the loan-forgiveness plan. The two borrowers argue that the entire plan should be blocked because they were excluded from its fullest benefits. The district court sided with the borrowers, and the Fifth Circuit declined overturn the ruling, thus prompting the appeal to the Supreme Court.

At oral arguments, much of the conversation was confined to the two primary roads that would provide a clean exit for the justices to avoid ruling on the program’s legality altogether.



Law and Crime

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