Supreme Court’s Skepticism of Student Loan Plan Has Upside for Liberals
Progressives might find there’s a silver lining to limiting executive power the next time the US has a Republican president.
Disappointed now, but relieved in a few years?
Photographer: Jemal Countess/Getty Images North AmericaThe future is looking grim for President Joe Biden’s signature $400 billion student debt forgiveness plan. It seems almost certain that the Supreme Court’s conservative justices will accept the state plaintiffs’ argument that they have standing to challenge the program even though it’s far from obvious how it affects them. On the merits, the justices showed interest in two alternative legal theories of why the debt forgiveness is beyond the president’s power to do without Congress. Regardless of which one the court adopts, the program seems very likely be struck down by a 6-3 vote.
That sounds bad for liberals. But on closer examination, the legal result may not be such a disaster for liberal principles of legal interpretation. Leave aside whether you think that the loan forgiveness is good public policy, a question on which there is room for disagreement, even among progressives. What’s troubling the conservative justices, legally speaking, is the scope of executive power implicated by the president’s unilateral decision to invoke his emergency pandemic powers to spend nearly half a trillion dollars without the approval of Congress.
