The strike ends at Spirit Aerosystems in Wichita as aerospace workers vote to return to work under a new contract. a legal battle is brewing in Kansas over gender and official forms of identification. and a new survey reveals why hundreds of people have stopped being foster parents in Kansas. Those stories and more headlines. here.
the public should not misinterpret that, it is just interesting to note that he drops that at the end of the opinion, clearly aware that the public safety, at each other s next right now. joining us onset as well. we going to be talking a little bit about the political implications and obviously the president s reaction to some of this. if you could pull on that thread and help me understand, as somebody who has never gone to law school, is about respecting a previous ruling of the court and that is the law of the land or, is it the view that that opinion was wrong in the first place. clearly, you know, brown versus the board of education, think best. obviously, times change and when i say respecting precedents, you look at all of
the authority to do this. they are saying, you know what, this is actually, they have, they did not even have standing. there s income absolutely, it was within that congressional provisioning that gave the biden administration the power to forgive the loans. you see the divide on the court. both of them siding with the conservatives in these two cases. i want to diving a little bit further. first, what was your reaction to these two different topics, these issues that the supreme court just waiting on? i m not shocked. you saw the lineup, use all the conservatives, members of the court, what their arguments were against, and you saw what, you know, justice jackson. we met there were arguments. the justices were pretty skeptical here of some of these
of cultural norms with the decisions. and then, the biggest decision to dig, which will have the largest impact on 43 million americans, the supreme court, striking down biden s student loan program. they struck it down in the hardest way that they could. they could have said, look, you violated the administrative procedures act, do this differently. instead they said no. the congressional statute that you cite to forgive some borrowers after 9/11 and has been used again during covid is not going to go far enough to give you the protection you need to forgive all of the student loans. in the opinion, led by justin robert justice roberts, he said this allows the secretary to waive or modify those loans but does not allow the secretary to rewrite the statute to the extent of canceling $430 billion in loans. he said you simply do not have
also, disenfranchising the hundreds of thousands of students within the states that would have benefited from the student debt forgiveness. we know that the heroes act gives the secretary of education the authority to alleviate this burden. we know that the president and the administration had a standing. we know to what they said with keegan, with the court did today , it really is setting us back and it is really unfortunate. i want to show some data from last year that shows students of color were more likely to have student loans with 33% of borrowers identifying as black, only 15% identifying has white. given that fact and what we saw yesterday with the supreme court striking down affirmative