Biden extends student-loan payment pause amid legal challenges to his forgiveness plan
The pandemic-era pause, which was set to resume January 1, will be extended through June 30, after a federal appeals court last week blocked the administration from carrying out Biden's plan to cancel student loan debt.
President Joe Biden announced that his administration would extend the pandemic-era pause in student loan repayments through June 30 amid legal challenges to his college debt-forgiveness plan.
Payments now set to resume Jan. 1 won’t be required again until 60 days after court challenges to Biden’s loan forgiveness plan are settled. If the litigation is not resolved by June 30, payments will resume 60 days after that, the Education Department said in a statement.
A federal appeals court last week blocked the administration from carrying out Biden’s plan to cancel as much as $20,000 (for most student-loan holders, the limit will be $10,000) in debt for some borrowers.
“I’m confident that our student debt relief plan is legal,” Biden said in a tweet. “But it’s on hold because Republican officials want to block it.”
The decision followed a ruling earlier this month from a federal judge in Texas finding the plan unlawful. The Department of Education has stopped accepting applications for loan forgiveness, thrusting millions of Americans into financial limbo.
The fresh pause in loan payments would alleviate uncertainty for borrowers as the administration asks the Supreme Court to review lower-court orders preventing implementation of Biden’s debt-cancellation plan, the Education Department said.
“We’re extending the payment pause because it would be deeply unfair to ask borrowers to pay a debt that they wouldn’t have to pay, were it not for the baseless lawsuits brought by Republican officials and special interests,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement.
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Within the last week, White House senior staff coalesced around the idea of extending the student loan repayment pause as the challenges to the administration’s decision worked their way through the court system.
The freeze on student loan repayments, first adopted in March 2020 under President Donald Trump, was extended multiple times by Biden. When Biden in August unveiled his broad debt-forgiveness plan, he announced that loan repayments would resume in January.
The Department of Education previously acknowledged an extension could cost several billion dollars a month but warned that payments resuming before legal challenges were resolved could lead to mass defaults.
Twenty-six million borrowers previously applied for forgiveness in the weeks doing so was possible, and the Department of Education has approved forgiveness for 16 million.
The timing of the announcement — ahead of the the Dec. 6 Senate runoff election in Georgia — could provide a boost to incumbent Democrat Raphael Warnock as he tries to fend off Republican challenger Herschel Walker.
Warnock pushed the Biden administration to forgive student debt, and the fresh payment pause could help energize younger voters.