Supporters of student debt forgiveness demonstrate outside the US Supreme Court on June 30, 2023, in Washington, DC.
Olivier Douliery | AFP | Getty Images"Under the Secretary's plan, roughly half of all federal borrowers would have their loans completely discharged," Roberts wrote.
How student loan forgiveness got to the Supreme CourtSupreme Court justices listen to arguments.
watch nowTwo of those legal challenges made it to the Supreme Court: one brought by six GOP-led states — Nebraska, Missouri, Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas and South Carolina — and another backed by the Job Creators Network Foundation, a conservative advocacy organization.
While the justices' decision largely matched the predictions of many legal experts, some saw it going another way, especially after the Supreme Court heard oral arguments for the two challenges to the president's plan at the end of February.
Persons:
Olivier Douliery, Roberts, Persis Yu, who'd, Biden, Bill Hennessey, he'd, Grant, overreach, Jed Shugerman, Elizabeth Prelogar
Organizations:
AFP, Getty, U.S . Department of Education, Consumer, Student, Protection, Supreme, U.S . Department of Justice, Heroes, Republican, GOP, South Carolina —, Job, Network Foundation
Locations:
Washington ,, Missouri, delinquencies, U.S, — Nebraska , Missouri , Arkansas , Iowa , Kansas, South Carolina, Fordham