By
Charles C. W. Cooke
Tuesday,
September 27, 2022
This
morning, the Pacific Legal Foundation filed a lawsuit against
President Biden’s illegal student-loan executive order. The case was filed in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana. The core
of the complaint is that
the administration has created new problems for borrowers in at least
six states that tax loan cancellation as income. People like Plaintiff Frank
Garrison will actually be worse off because of the cancellation. Indeed, Mr.
Garrison will face immediate tax liability from the state of Indiana because of
the automatic cancellation of a portion of his debt. These taxes would not be
owed for debt forgiveness under the Congressionally authorized program
rewarding public service. Mr. Garrison and millions of others similarly
situated in the six relevant states will receive no additional benefit from the
cancellation—just a one-time additional penalty.
There is
no doubt that Biden’s order is illegal. Not only is the statutory justification
incredibly weak, but the condition that is necessary for it to apply — the
existence of an emergency — simply does not obtain. There is a reason that
most of the legal analysis has focused on the potential problems with standing,
rather than on the merits of Biden’s argument, and that reason is that there
are, in fact, no merits to Biden’s argument. In effect, standing is the whole
game.
The
Pacific Legal Foundation may have cracked that. The argument here is that
Garrison (like others) has suffered an injury because the state of Indiana —
like Wisconsin, Minnesota, Arkansas, and North Carolina — taxes loan
“forgiveness.” Usually, this wouldn’t be a problem, because, under the terms of
Biden’s order, most potential recipients will be obliged to actively
apply for the “forgiveness.” But, as an enrollee in the Public Service
Loan Forgiveness program that Congress has created, the forgiveness will
happen automatically for Garrison, which, in turn, will create
a taxable event. Because loan forgiveness under the Public Service Loan
Forgiveness is not taxable in Indiana (or the other states), but loan
forgiveness under Biden’s order is, Garrison will now be hit with an unforeseen
tax penalty that, absent Biden’s illegal reclassification, he would have
avoided.
If the
court accepts that this constitutes a legitimate injury, the rest is likely to
follow.
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