Here’s the good news: President Joe Biden is slowly, maybe, possibly coming to a decision about what to do about the student loan time bomb that’s been ticking since he took office. But the latest cryptic hints from Biden just underscore how America’s roughly 43 million federal student loan debt holders have been kept in the dark over the last year and a half.
Earlier this month, the administration extended the pause on student loan repayments and interest through August, and it’s been more than two years since many recipients have paid down any of the $1.59 trillion in such loans that the federal government has disbursed. But since the freeze began in March 2020, each time we’ve run up against the date to turn the system back on, we’ve gotten another “temporary” pause.
The latest cryptic hints from Biden just underscore how America’s roughly 43 million federal student loan debt holders have been kept in the dark over the last year and a half.
The confusion of debt holders about what’s going to happen — how much we will have to pay back and when — has become a potential political liability for the Democrats. More importantly, it’s caused an untenable state of limbo: Should we be paying down our debts now, when the interest rate is still frozen and our payments can go directly to the remaining balance? Or do we wait until the moratorium is over, holding on to the cash the pause has freed up even as prices rise thanks to inflation?
Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus spoke of the need for firm decisions when they met with President Joe Biden on Tuesday for a wide-ranging policy discussion. In that conversation, Biden “expressed openness to forgiving some student loan debt,” NBC News reported. When Rep. Tony Cardenas, D-Calif., suggested extending the moratorium again after August, according to The Washington Post, Biden “responded with a smile, ‘Well, Tony, I’ve extended it every time.’”
Cardenas then suggested Biden issue an executive order clearing debt holders of at least $10,000 in student loans. Cardenas told CBS News that Biden then “smiled and said, ‘You’re going to like what I do on that, I’m looking to do something on that and I think you’re going to like what I do.’”
For those keeping score, that’s at least two Biden smiles and zero commitments about what’s going to happen. It’s a good thing Biden is, per Cardenas, “looking to do something,” especially given his previous hesitancy. During the 2020 presidential campaign, he’d only backed signing legislation from Congress that would wipe out that amount of debt. He’d also shrugged off suggestions that, on his own, he has the authority to cancel up to $50,000 worth of debt.
Last year, the White House said it had ordered the departments of Justice and Education to review whether Biden has the power to delete federal student loan debt. We haven’t heard how that review has gone, even though Democrats in Congress have pushed Biden to act. (The fact that Congress won’t do the right thing and change the law to explicitly give the president this power is a whole other issue.)
Every day the White House delays is giving the GOP more space to argue against student loan forgiveness.
The White House may be planning to wait closer to August to announce a debt cancellation to better give Democrats a needed boost heading into the midterms. But for now, there’s a clear information gap as the administration figures out its game plan, which can only feed into the perception among 18- to 34-year-olds, especially, that the Biden presidency hasn’t benefited them.








