[House Document 118-46]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
118th Congress, 1st Session - - - - - - - - - - House Document 118-46
VETO MESSAGE OF H.J. RES. 45
__________
MESSAGE
from
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
transmitting
A VETO MESSAGE ON H.J. RES. 45
[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
June 9, 2023.--Ordered to be printed
_________
U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE
39-011 WASHINGTON : 2023
To the House of Representatives:
I am returning herewith without my approval H.J. Res. 45, a
resolution that would disapprove of the Department of
Education's rule relating to ``Waivers and Modifications of
Federal Student Loans.''
Since Day One, my Administration has been fighting to make
college cheaper and the student loan system more manageable for
borrowers. My Administration has championed the largest
increase to Pell Grants in the last decade--a combined increase
of $900 to the maximum award for students over the last 2
years--and has a plan to double the maximum Pell Grant by 2029
to nearly $13,000. This means more money in students' pockets
to pay for college. To help individuals who had to borrow to go
to college, my Administration has been building a student loan
system that works. The Department of Education has proposed the
most generous repayment plan ever, which will cut undergraduate
loan payments in half. It has also reformed the Public Service
Loan Forgiveness program to make it easier for hundreds of
thousands of public service employees to get the debt relief
they deserve.
The pandemic was devastating for families across the
Nation. To give borrowers the essential relief they need as
they recover from the economic strains associated with the
COVID-19 pandemic, the Department of Education created a
program to provide up to $10,000 in debt relief--and up to
$20,000 for Pell Grant recipients--reaching more than 40
million hard-working Americans. Nearly 90 percent of this
relief would go to Americans earning less than $75,000 per
year, and no relief would go to any individual or household in
the top 5 percent of incomes.
The demand for this relief is undeniable. In less than 4
weeks--during the period when the student debt relief
application was available--26 million people applied or were
deemed automatically eligible for relief. At least 16 million
of those borrowers could have received debt relief already if
it were not for meritless lawsuits waged by opponents of this
program.
The Department of Education's action is based on decades
old authority, granted by the Congress. Multiple
administrations over the last two decades have used this
authority, following the same procedures as my Administration,
to protect borrowers from the effects of national emergencies
and military deployments. The Department of Education's
exercise of this authority has never previously been subject to
the Congressional Review Act.
It is a shame for working families across the country that
lawmakers continue to pursue this unprecedented attempt to deny
critical relief to millions of their own constituents, even as
several of these same lawmakers have had tens of thousands of
dollars of their own business loans forgiven by the Federal
Government.
I remain committed to continuing to make college affordable
and providing this critical relief to borrowers as they work to
recover from a once-in-a-century pandemic.
Therefore, I am vetoing this resolution.
Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
The White House, June 7, 2023.
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