There are several noteworthy things about this.
1. SAVE’s legal troubles were mostly unexpected.
Of the biggest student loan forgiveness plans, the SAVE plan was on the soundest legal ground, as the relevant law didn’t place many restrictions on the repayment provisions that the ED Secretary could introduce when designing an income-driven repayment plan. For example, the law stated that the Secretary couldn’t require repayment for more than 25 years but was silent on a minimum number of years, so the SAVE plans sought to collect payments for as few as 10 years for many borrowers. Due to the absence of guardrails in the legislative language, most analysts thought SAVE was on safe legal ground. Yet two district courts and now a circuit court have cast considerable doubt on whether the policy is legal.