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Search resuls for: "Bill Hennessey"


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Former President Donald Trump is seen in court on Thursday in this courtroom sketch. America now faces the prospect of an ex-president repeatedly going on trial in an election year in which he’s the Republican front-runner and is promising a new White House term of retribution. He is responding with the same kind of extreme rhetoric that injected fury into his political base and erupted into violence after the last election. If he wins back the White House, the already twice-impeached new president could trigger a new constitutional crisis by sweeping away the federal cases against him or even by pardoning himself. Any alternative Republican president could find themselves besieged by demands from Trump supporters for a pardon that, if granted, could overshadow their entire presidency.
Persons: Donald Trump, Bill Hennessey, Trump, pardoning, , , Geoff Duncan Organizations: Washington, Republican, Trump Locations: America, Georgia
Supreme Court justices listen to arguments. U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts poses during a group portrait at the Supreme Court in Washington, U.S., October 7, 2022. They pointed out that the lender's revenue was actually expected to rise because of some student loan servicers recently leaving the space and it picking up extra accounts. "I was surprised the court found Missouri had standing," said higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz. That law was passed in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and grants the president broad power to revise student loan programs during national emergencies.
Persons: Bill Hennessey, Joe Biden's, John Roberts, Roberts, John G, Evelyn Hockstein, servicers, Mark Kantrowitz, Luke Herrine, Antonin Scalia, Herrine, Elena Kagan, Kagan Organizations: Biden, Finance, GOP, Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority, Supreme, Reuters, University of Alabama, Liberal, U.S . Department of Education Locations: — Arkansas, Iowa , Kansas , Missouri , Nebraska, South Carolina, . Nebraska, Missouri, Washington , U.S, delinquencies
Supporters of student debt forgiveness demonstrate outside the US Supreme Court on June 30, 2023, in Washington, DC. Olivier Douliery | AFP | Getty Images"Under the Secretary's plan, roughly half of all federal borrowers would have their loans completely discharged," Roberts wrote. How student loan forgiveness got to the Supreme CourtSupreme Court justices listen to arguments. watch nowTwo of those legal challenges made it to the Supreme Court: one brought by six GOP-led states — Nebraska, Missouri, Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas and South Carolina — and another backed by the Job Creators Network Foundation, a conservative advocacy organization. While the justices' decision largely matched the predictions of many legal experts, some saw it going another way, especially after the Supreme Court heard oral arguments for the two challenges to the president's plan at the end of February.
Persons: Olivier Douliery, Roberts, Persis Yu, who'd, Biden, Bill Hennessey, he'd, Grant, overreach, Jed Shugerman, Elizabeth Prelogar Organizations: AFP, Getty, U.S . Department of Education, Consumer, Student, Protection, Supreme, U.S . Department of Justice, Heroes, Republican, GOP, South Carolina —, Job, Network Foundation Locations: Washington ,, Missouri, delinquencies, U.S, — Nebraska , Missouri , Arkansas , Iowa , Kansas, South Carolina, Fordham
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