It is no secret that the Biden administration is steadfast in its determination to forgive as many student loans as possible, no matter what the law says.
This summer, the
Supreme Court
reminded President
Joe Biden
that he must follow the law, stating, âThe basic and consequential trade-offs’ inherent in a mass debt cancellation program âare ones that Congress would likely have intended for itself.ââ The legislative branch has also explicitly
rejected
forgiveness through bipartisan votes.
HOUSING DISASTER THREATENS ECONOMY IN FRONT OF BIDEN’S EYES
But just hours after the courtâs ruling, Biden
directed
his Department of Education to ignore Congress and the Supreme Court and forgive the loans anyway. Now we have learned that he is stacking the relevant negotiating panel with loan forgiveness advocates, even though similar rulemakings under both Democratic and Republican administrations have aimed for a degree of ideological diversity.
Unlike other federal rulemaking processes, the Department of Educationâs rulemakings on higher education topics require a process known as â
negotiated rulemaking
.â While the department gets to select the members of the negotiating panel, this process has historically involved career civil servants and had an eye toward broad representation to demonstrate that the process is fair and inclusive of groups likely to be affected by the regulation in question.
We will get a better sense of the true ideological makeup of the
panel
when it convenes this fall. However, an early look at whom the Biden team selected already calls into question whether the administrationâs legally mandated ânegotiationâ is a foregone conclusion.
Not all of the 14 members appear to have made public statements on student loan debt forgiveness, but many already agree fervently and publicly with the Biden position, which raises the question of whether the rulemaking process is being launched by the department in good faith.
The panel also entirely excludes groups that are significantly affected, such as those representing taxpayers. By contrast,
negotiations
under former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos often included some of her vocal opponents and others who were openly skeptical of her proposals.
The Biden administration is also not being entirely honest about who it has selected. Some negotiators are identified as merely representing constituencies such as students or colleges but appear to have undisclosed affiliations with teachers unions, loan forgiveness advocacy organizations, and other left-wing groups.
At this negotiation, a representative of Missouriâs Office of the Attorney General, which has fought Bidenâs plans in court, may be the only obvious skeptic who will participate. But since he was only selected as an âalternate,â rather than a full member of the committee, he will have no power to vote on the agenda or final outcome and may have limited opportunity even to speak.
In contrast, here are where many of the voting members of the committee stand:
Lane Thompson, Oregon DCBS â Division of Financial Regulation
- From her
personal X, formerly Twitter
, account, she has posted: âStudent loan opinion is in. Missouri has standing, relief denied. Donât ever hope for anything my dudes, nothing good happens.â
And
: â@JoeBiden bro, just cancel the f***ing student loans.â
Wisdom Cole, NAACP
- On the potential of Bidenâs forgiveness plan being
struck down
: âNot only would this be a disastrous blow to Black Americans, but to our economy as a whole â the racial wealth gap will widen, and the vicious cycle of economic inequality will continue.â - From the
NAACP website
: âIt’s time for the President and his leaders to recognize the urgency of this matter and take decisive action to ensure that the burden of student loan debt is alleviated for the Black community. Young voters have repeatedly shown up and delivered for this Administration â they expect a return on their investment of time and passion. One thing is clear â failure is not an option.â
Kyra Taylor, National Consumer Law Center
- From her
personal X
account after the Supreme Court ruling: âThe Supreme Court’s decision today was wrong, point blank, and it threatens to throw millions of low- and middle-income people into financial crisis in two short months.â - The NCLC issued a
statement
after the ruling: âWe are deeply disappointed by this decision: It is wrong on the law and threatens the financial security of millions of low-income Americans who are struggling with unaffordable student loan debt. They were counting on debt relief to manage their payments when bills resume in September for the first time in three years.â
Yael Shavit, Office of the Massachusetts Attorney General
- â
Served
as lead counsel for a coalition of states in multiple federal lawsuits brought to ensure the full implementation of regulations intended to provide protections and loan forgiveness to student loan borrowers across the country.â
Ashley Pizzuti, San Joaquin Delta College
- On her personal X account, Pizzuti reposted a tweet that read, âIn knocking down student debt relief, the Supreme Court violated the Constitution. That isnât hyperbole. They are a corrupt group of unelected judges that accept bribes and other luxurious gifts in exchange for rulings that take away our rights. The court must be abolished.â
Richard Haase, State University of New York at Stony Brook
- While not disclosed in the Department of Educationâs announcement, he is president of the Half Hollow Hills Teachers’ Association, an affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers.
- He has been featured by AFT in its
publications
on the matter of student loan relief. The AFT has been extremely
vocal
in favor of loan forgiveness.
Jada Sanford, Stephen F. Austin University
- Serves as a â
Texas Young Advocate
â for Young Invincibles, an advocacy organization, which
called
the Supreme Courtâs ruling on loan forgiveness, âthe latest shameful example of the Supreme Court choosing politics over people. President Bidenâs debt cancellation is legal and essential for the economic future of young people.â This affiliation was also not disclosed by the department.
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We should withhold judgment to a degree until the negotiations begin. However, this already seems to be the most politicized education rulemaking weâve seen. After ignoring the legislative and judicial branches, the Biden administration is now abandoning the executive branchâs long-standing practices that promote genuine public input in the regulatory process, instead appointing ideological warriors rather than those steeped in the departmentâs programs and regulations.
If the department wants a fair rulemaking process, why is it not only refusing to seat an ideologically diverse panel but instead stacking it with hardcore supporters who seem to be outside the mainstream?
Michael Brickman is an adjunct fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.