The Volokh Conspiracy
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Biden Administration Asks Supreme Court to Lift Injunction Blocking their Massive Loan Forgiveness Program
The Supreme Court's resolution of this procedural issue may be a preview of the justices' views on the ultimate resolution of the student loan forgiveness litigation.

Today the Biden Administration filed an application urging the Supreme Court to lift a lower court preliminary injunction blocking implementation of the president's massive student loan forgiveness program, which would cancel some $400 billion in student loan debt. I wrote about the lower court decision here. The Supreme Court's resolution of the Administration's request may well prefigure the justices' views on how the student loan litigation should be resolved overall. If the justices lift the lower court injunction, it could be a signal a majority of the Court believes that the plaintiffs don't have standing to challenge the loan forgiveness program, that the program is legal, or some combination of both. If, on the other hand, the Court rules against the Biden Administration, that may well indicate a majority of the justices oppose Biden's position on both standing and the merits.
The Eighth Circuit appellate decision the administration seeks to overturn itself overruled a trial court decision holding that the six state governments that filed the case lacked standing to do so. In my view, the Eighth Circuit correctly ruled that the state of Missouri, at least, has standing because a state agency - the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MOHELA) - is a loan servicer that would suffer financial losses if the Biden loan forgiveness plan gets implemented.
In its brief urging the Supreme Court to vacate the Eighth Circuit decision, the Biden Justice Department argues that Missouri lacks standing because the stand cannot assert standing on behalf of the rights of a "third party," and MOHELA's leadership was not involved in the decision to bring the lawsuit. This overlooks the fact that MOHELA is not a third party, but a state-owned corporation. Indeed, Indeed, the very same letter in which the agency's leaders disclaim involvement in the lawsuit also indicates that MOHELA is "a government entity" and "a public instrumentality of the State of Missouri." Thus, any financial loss to MOHELA is also necessarily a loss to the state. As the Eighth Circuit emphasized, MOHELA also is legally obliged to turn over funds to the state treasury and that flow of payments will be reduced if MOHELA suffers financial losses as a result of the loan forgiveness program.
If the Administration's ultra-narrow theory of standing is accepted, it would give the White House broad power to usurp congressional spending authority without anyone being able to challenge it in court. Presidents could raid the Treasury to hand out funds to favored constituencies, even in the absence of congressional authorization. They could then turn around and claim no one has standing to sue because almost every such claim would involve a harm that is somehow channeled through a "third party." Or at least that will be true if the Court accepts the administration's incredibly broad theory of what counts as a third party, under which MOHELA is a third party relative to the state of Missouri, despite being a state government entity. Even if you trust Biden with such sweeping power over the federal budget, I suspect you do not have such confidence in the next Republican administration, whether run by Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, or someone else.
For all these reasons, I hope and tentatively expect that a majority of justices will reject the Administration's pernicious standing argument. Obviously, the Administration also argues that the program is legal on the merits under the 2003 HEROES Act. I will not try to go over that issue here. But I have previously criticized the HEROES Act theory in some detail.
Most experts believe the Administration has a much better chance of prevailing on standing than on the merits. That may be why the administration itself has significantly reduced the scope of the program in order to eliminate some potential plaintiffs who might be able to get standing.
There are other ongoing cases challenging the Biden loan forgiveness program, including one where a federal district court has issued its own order blocking the program. I will have more to say about some of these other cases in a future post.
But virtually all informed observers agree that the six-state lawsuit is the one with the strongest case for standing. If the Supreme Court ends up denying standing in this one, it is likely to do so in the others, as well. Thus, the state case remains pivotal for the overall fate of the program, and the resulting precedent this litigation will set.
UPDATE: I have made some minor additions to this post.
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Somewhere in this whole MOHELA business there is a good circumcision joke, but I can't find it. Can someone help?
It's on the tip of .... someone's .... tongue.
If the Administration's ultra-narrow theory of standing is accepted, it would give the White House broad power to usurp congressional spending authority without anyone being able to challenge it in court. Presidents could raid the Treasury to hand out funds to favored constituencies, even in the absence of congressional authorization. They could then turn around and claim no one has standing to sue because almost every such claim would involve a harm that is somehow channeled through a "third party." Even if you trust Biden with such sweeping power, I suspect you do not have such confidence in the next Republican administration, whether run by Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, or someone else.
Mr. Somin: how does MOHELA have a say in the borrower-government relationship? The short answer is that it doesn't--and therefore its suit must be dismissed.
What relevance is “have a say”?
If the action is unlawful and MOHELA is harmed, then they may ask courts for a remedy. MOHELA doesn’t need the authority to decide anything for the Feds or the borrower in order to expect the Biden Administration not to unlawfully cause MOHELA an injury.
Ben, go ahead and show without reference to MOHELA that loan forgiveness is unlawful. That way you can avoid circular reasoning. The point you responded to argued that harm to MOHELA is not a criterion to show unlawful action.
The court will decide that question. It shouldn’t be difficult. The point is the MOHELA has standing.
Ben, standing principles require more than you-acted-illegally-and that-caused-harm-to-me. And that's why the baseball analogy is apt. MOHELA simply has no right, through litigation, to attempt to dictate how the federal government decides to treat the debt. Now, if MOHELA is harmed, and the government violated MOHELA's rights (reliance interests or whatever), then money damages would be appropriate. But what right does MOHELA have to get a court order that says to the government "thou shalt enforce debts owed to you to the fullest extent of the law"?
How is MOHELA/Missouri any different from a vendor at a baseball stadium suing Major League Baseball because an ump's bad call kept the home team out of the playoffs? Financial harm, yes, but the umpiring is between MLB and the clubs.
Financial harm is, you know, harm. And your comparison is lame - the umpire has the power to make the call and umpire mistakes are a regular part of the game.
The Biden proposal is hurting the vast majority of the country (higher taxes or higher collective debt) yet the Biden administration, and apparently you, think that nobody has standing to challenge it? How does that work?
And don’t go comparing it to a normal tax increase or a normal spending increase. Congress and the President clearly have the power to do that. Does Biden have the power to do this? That’s the issue in the lawsuit. I can certainly see where the answer to that question is no. So can Biden, which is why he doesn’t want anyone to be able to challenge it.
Financial harm is, you know, harm.
The federal government lawfully regulates commerce using myriad actions which deliver financial harms to some parties, and financial benefits to others.
Your broader argument about harm to the rest of the country is more-plausibly founded, but political. What right wingers demand here is political use of the Court.
No doubt you are aware of that. Don't you object that Biden hit on student loan forgiveness as a political blandishment to affect mid-term voting outcomes? That is how I see it. The mid-term campaign was the right forum to evaluate your counter-claim, and it was used that way. The (equivocal) election outcome included the public's political response to your argument.
The comment didn't say that no one had standing. It made the case, rightly or wrongly, that MOHELA didn't have standing.
First of all, the reasons your state for why the umpiring analogy doesn't work don't cut it. In fact, you pretty much make my point. The point is that the vendor, while harmed, doesn't have the legal entitlement to perfect umpiring. Same here with MOHELA--whatever its rights are, they do not include forcing the US government to enforce to their fullest extent the loan agreements between the government and each borrower. In other words, the loan agreements are an A & B issue, and C (i.e., MOHELA) can see its way out.
Second, the idea that this is so illegal (and I agree) that there must be standing is not an argument that has been accepted.
Third, calling an argument "lame" without much analysis is just weak.
This case is not a good one to bring to the Supreme Court for emergency relief. The injunction preserves the status quo. Debtors do not have any present obligation to pay their debts. The dispute is over whether their future payments will be $10,000 more or less.
It is if the injunction was issued on behalf of a litigant with no standing.
Even if five members of the Supreme Court think there is no standing, are they going to expend political capital on a "shadow docket" ruling with no practical impact? If we had students selling their kidneys to the highest bidder lest they have their driver's and professional licenses revoked as debtors to the government, then the case would be worth a look.
Hope springs eternal...
The brief is well-done.
Winning on the standing issue.
"which would cancel some $400 billion in student loan debt"
Can we please report this accurately?
This will transfer $400 billion in student debt to the US taxpayers, not cancel it.
Yeah, if I had a nickel for every time I've heard "how you gonna PAY for those tax cuts, hmmm?" I wouldn't need tax cuts. Funny how they can't apply that same thought process to foregoing an actual accrued obligation rather than a theoretical future one.
No, that's not how taking on debt works.
You can argue it's a bad policy without leaning on the 'sovereign debt is just like a credit card' nonsense.
This isn't taking on debt, it's writing debt off. And the only "sovereign debt is just like a credit card" argument is in your imagination.
“Presidents could raid the Treasury to hand out funds to favored constituencies, even in the absence of congressional authorization.”
And we know how tough it is to persuade Congress to hand out funds to favored constituencies.
The president's favored constituencies are not necessarily the same as Congress's, and voters apply a lot more accountability for Congressional votes than for executive orders.
Michael P — The voters (America's joint sovereign, after all) are the appropriate party to decide questions of relative political accountability among the branches. Whether you have accurately characterized their decision is another question, of course. Either way, it is not the job of the Court to usurp that power.
Yes, the courts are the appropriate party to check the power of an unrestrained savage in the White House.
The fact that you refer to Biden as an unrestrained savage is itself a reason not to give you and your friends power to block whatever they do. Frankly, your own repeated conflation of political disagreement with treason and terrorism, as you have regularly done in your comments, is Exhibit A in why it was a very good thing the Framers didn’t give the small body of unelected officials you currently think most likely to do your will unrestrained power over others. (Remember when it was the Vice President who was supposedly all-powerful?)
Of course, we all know that if they don’t do what you want, you’ll soon also be calling them traitors, terrorists, savages, etc. etc. etc. (just look at what was said about Mike Pence.)
Vocabulary for this sort of thing has changed somewhat since George Orwell’s Politics and the English Language. But the basic style of rhetoric, which your comments richly exhibit, has remained more or less the same.
Oh really? Hmmm. Recall the Ashley Biden diary prosecution. First of all, since when should the feds be charging people with a crime for selling what someone else left behind? Those two people's lives have been ruined because Joe Biden's administration acted as a Praetorian Guard. He owns that. And the fact that he took showers with his the-teen daughter. Ewwwwww.
At least that requires the votes of 268 people, not the fiat of one mini-Hitler.
If current standing doctrine means that the executive can run amok and courts are powerless to stop it, then the current standing doctrine is illegitimate. Morally, constitutionally, and historically.
By the arguments of the administration, they could pay federal employees a $100,000 bonus each to go out to a pro-Biden rally, and no one would have standing to challenge it.
Elections are the primary way our Constitution deals with government run amok. Courts simply aren’t set upas babysitters there to supervise their day to day activity. If you are concerned somebody might do this, don’t vote for them.
That said, in your hypothetical, government workers who didn’t get a bonus because they didn’t attend the rally would have standing to sue.
They would have standing based on an argued entitlement to $100,000.
Assuming Missouri has standing by way of MOHELA, a national injunction is extreme overkill given that MOHELA was injured by, at most, only the loans it processed.
Moreover, why does it need an injunction at all?Why can’t its injury be redressed if it wins by paying it the small amount of money it says it would be owed? Why couldn’t its needs be satisfied by requiring the United States to post a bond?