This article was originally published on abajournal.com.
President Joe Biden’s latest plan to cancel some student debt is based on a different law than the one before the U.S. Supreme Court, when it struck down a loan forgiveness program in June.
But some conservative commentators say the new plan remains vulnerable to legal attacks, report NPR and the Washington Post.
The plan announced Friday, as well as final regulations of a so-called SAVE plan, rely on loan forgiveness provisions under the 1965 Higher Education Act, report CBS News and Forbes.
The plan struck down by the Supreme Court in Biden v. Nebraska was based on a law known as the HEROES Act, which is shorthand for the Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions Act, which allows waivers and modifications of student-aid programs in connection with national emergencies.
The Biden administration said the COVID-19 pandemic was a qualifying emergency. But the Supreme Court said in Biden v. Nebraska the text of the HEROES Act did not give the U.S. Department of Education the authority to rewrite the Education Act “from the ground up.”
The issue in any challenge to the latest plan will be whether it will “actually transform the student loan system into something that Congress would never have authorized,” said Nat Malkus, who studies higher education at the American Enterprise Institute, in an interview with NPR.