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Your questions about Trump 2.0, answered
  + stars: | 2024-11-22 | by ( Zachary B. Wolf | Leinz Vales | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +19 min
CNN —When we asked CNN readers for their questions about the incoming Trump 2.0 administration, we got a lot of nervous and scared feedback. Donald Trump and Ivanka Trump walk to Marine One at the White House in Washington, DC, on January 4, 2021. This is her response:Trump has promised to protect Social Security and not raise the retirement age or make other cuts. For more, read Luhby’s story on how a second Trump term could affect Social Security benefits. For his second term, Trump has promised to find military officials more loyal to him and that he’ll fight an “enemy from within” of political opponents.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, I’m, , Catherine Shoichet, Shoichet, Trump, , Lisa Graybill, Tom Homan, He’s, Kelli Stump, she’s, , Ashley, Joe Biden, Eric Gay, Stephen Miller, Trump’s, Alan, Jim Sciutto, Roman Plipey, Afghanistan –, Vladimir, Putin, Marco, Rubio, Mike, Waltz –, Tulsi, Gabbard, Will, Greg, ” Trump, Donald Trump, Ivanka Trump, Joshua Roberts, hasn’t, Tami Luhby, James, There’s, Portugal's, Armando Franca, Lawrence, Katie Lobosco, that’s, there’s, , Biden’s, Will Trump, Biden, Emily, … Gustavo, doesn’t Biden, Steve Here’s, Ella Nilsen, Jim Watson, it’s, Will Trump’s, Keith Trump’s, Nixon, Adam, ” Sen, Adam Schiff of, ” Schiff, Matt Gaetz Organizations: CNN, Trump, Security, National Immigration Law Center, American Immigration Lawyers, Ashley Presidents, US Customs, National Guard, US, Ukraine, Getty, NATO, White, Reuters, Social, Social Security, Bee, FBI, New Jersey Trump, Republicans, Congress, Pentagon, Trump White House, NPR Locations: Rio, Mexico, Eagle Pass , Texas, Ukraine, Powers, Russia, China, Europe, Kyiv, Roman, AFP, Afghanistan, Maine, Washington ,, Barbara, Louisiana, Italy, Lisbon, Illinois, New Jersey, Florida, North Carolina, Colorado, Red Butte, Tusayan , Arizona, Adam Schiff of California
Under Trump, the U.S. Department of Education is likely to abandon its efforts to deliver wide-scale student loan relief , experts say. It has done so mostly by improving existing student loan relief programs that had long been plagued by problems, including the Public Service Loan Forgiveness initiative and income-driven repayment plans. In June, U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree in Wichita, Kansas, described student loan forgiveness as having an "irreversible impact," in his decision to block one of the Biden administration's relief measures. For example, in February, some borrowers saw their debts reinstated under the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program. In a new report, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau cites, among the errors reported by student loan borrowers, "balance reinstatements," in which a loan servicer tacks a loan balance back on to one's account.
Persons: I've, Trump, Mark Kantrowitz, who've, Joe Biden, Betsy Mayotte, Daniel Crabtree, Biden, aren't, Kantrowitz, they've, tacks Organizations: Trump, U.S . Department of Education, Education Department, Public, The, Student Loan Advisors, District, Finance, Black, College Investor, Consumer Financial, Bureau Locations: U.S, Wichita , Kansas
Here are seven ways a Trump administration could affect your personal finances. During Trump’s first term, the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act temporarily expanded the child tax credit from $1,000 to $2,000. “He will deliver.”TaxesThe Trump administration is expected to focus on extending tax cuts introduced by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that are set to expire in 2025. The Trump administration wants to “promote choice and competition” and make health care more affordable, according to his policy platform. The Trump administration will likely cut red tape to encourage business and real estate developments.
Persons: Donald Trump, he’d, Trump, JD Vance, Maria Castillo Dominguez, , Karoline Leavitt, Vance, , ” Leavitt, Alan Auerbach, Social Security Trump, Biden, Berkeley’s Auerbach, Joe Biden’s, ” Auerbach, “ They’re, , Trump’s, Auerbach, Sarah Lueck, ” Trump Organizations: CNN, Social Security, Jobs, Valoria Wealth Management, Trump, Urban, Brookings Tax, Tax, UC Berkeley, Center, enrollees, Republicans, Public, Consumer, National Retail Federation, Health, Republican, Center for Budget, Medicare, it’s, Housing
President-elect Donald Trump is unlikely to continue Biden's student-debt relief efforts. Two of Biden's debt relief plans remain blocked in court, keeping borrowers in limbo. "He's throwing money out the window," Trump previously said of Biden's debt relief efforts, also calling broad relief "vile" and illegal. If they secure the majority in both the House and Senate, legislation to rescind Biden's debt relief efforts has a chance of being signed into law. For now, millions of borrowers remain on forbearance as they wait for the courts to decide what will come of Biden's broader debt relief efforts, leaving their timeline for repayment in limbo.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Joe, Biden, hasn't, Karoline Leavitt, Vance, Mike Pierce, Pierce Organizations: Service, GOP, Education Department, Public, Business, Trump, Protection, Republican, Senate
What Trump's win could mean for student loan forgiveness
  + stars: | 2024-11-07 | by ( Annie Nova | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +4 min
St. Louis-based U.S. District Judge Matthew Schelp, a Trump appointee, issued the latest preliminary injunction against Biden's revised student loan forgiveness plan. Student loan forgiveness likely to dry up under TrumpU.S. President Joe Biden speaks as he announces a new plan for federal student loan relief during a visit to Madison Area Technical College Truax Campus, in Madison, Wisconsin, U.S, April 8, 2024. Kevin Lamarque | ReutersBiden has forgiven more federal student debt than any other president. It has done so mostly by improving existing student loan relief programs that had long been plagued by problems. "The Biden administration has been making periodic announcements about loan forgiveness," Kantrowitz said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump's, Trump, Mark Kantrowitz, Joe Biden's, Biden, Matthew Schelp, Biden's, Kantrowitz, Joe Biden, Kevin Lamarque, Reuters Biden, George W, Bush, Mike Pierce, Mario Tama Organizations: U.S . Department, Trump, Biden, District, Center for American, Congressional Research Service, Trump U.S, Madison Area Technical, Truax, Reuters, Education Department, Public, Senate, Protection Center, University of Southern, USC, Getty Locations: Racine , Wisconsin, Louis, U.S, Madison , Wisconsin, University of Southern California, Los Angeles , California
Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese said he would cut student debt by 20% next year. AdvertisementThe Australian government on Sunday announced a sweeping plan to forgive 20% of student debt for around 3 million Australians. The debt relief is designed to promote "intergenerational equity," Albanese told Australian Broadcasting Radio on Monday, according to Bloomberg. AdvertisementHowever, Biden's efforts to grant broad student loan relief have hit several stumbling blocks. Biden's Education Department is continuing to work on debt relief proposals; if finalized, the latest one would benefit 8 million borrowers facing hardship.
Persons: Anthony Albanese, , Albanese, it's, Andrew Norton, Richard Holden, Ayelet Sheffey, Biden's, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris Organizations: Service, Sunday, Labor, Australian Broadcasting Radio, Bloomberg, Australian National University, University of New, ABC News, Biden's, Department Locations: University of New South Wales
US President Joe Biden gestures after speaking about student loan debt relief at Madison Area Technical College in Madison, Wisconsin, April 8, 2024. The Biden administration introduced a new proposal Friday to deliver student loan forgiveness to Americans who experience "financially devastating hardships." The announcement was the latest effort by the Education Department under President Joe Biden to cancel people's education debt. However, the department's previous attempts to provide wide-scale student loan forgiveness are currently being blocked by the courts after a wave of GOP-led legal challenges. Former President Donald Trump is a vocal critic of policies to reduce or eliminate the balances of student loan holders.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, it's, Miguel Cardona, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris Organizations: Madison Area Technical College, Education Department, Republican, Federal, Democratic Locations: Madison , Wisconsin
U.S. President Joe Biden speaks as he announces a new plan for federal student loan relief during a visit to Madison Area Technical College Truax Campus, in Madison, Wisconsin, U.S, April 8, 2024. Federal student loan payments for some 8 million borrowers will remain on pause for six months or longer, a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Education said. The development on Monday comes as the administration has been dragged into a slew of legal battles waged by Republicans over its recent student loan relief efforts. The borrowers who are excused from their monthly payments are those enrolled in the Biden administration's new SAVE plan. Before the legal challenges, the Education Department had already forgiven $5.5 billion in student debt for 414,000 borrowers through the SAVE Plan.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden Organizations: Madison Area Technical, Truax, Federal, U.S . Department of Education, Biden, Education Department, SAVE Locations: Madison , Wisconsin, U.S, Kansas and Missouri
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration announced a milestone Thursday in its effort to cancel Americans' student debt: it has provided relief to more than one million borrowers who work in public service. The Education Department said that before Biden's presidency, only 7,000 public servants had ever received student debt relief through the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program. The milestone comes after the administration has faced legal challenges to a number of its student debt relief proposals and roadblocks put up by court rulings. The Supreme Court, for example, ruled last year that the administration’s original student debt forgiveness program couldn't take effect. That plan would have benefited 43 million borrowers by canceling up to $20,000 in debt, potentially costing more than $400 billion.
Persons: WASHINGTON —, Joe Biden, Biden's, Miguel Cardona, ” Cardona, Cardona, Kamala Harris Organizations: Biden, of Education's Public, The Education Department, Public, Education Department, Republican
The Biden administration announced on Thursday that it was forgiving another $4.5 billion in student debt for over 60,000 borrowers. The latest round of relief is a result of the U.S. Department of Education's fixes to the popular, but once troubled, Public Service Loan Forgiveness program. "Public service workers – teachers, nurses, firefighters, and more – are the bedrocks of our communities and our country," Biden said in a statement. Before Biden took office, only 7,000 people had ever received the debt relief under PSLF, the U.S. Department of Education said. By contrast, Trump has called for the elimination of the Public Service Loan Forgiveness initiative and expressed opposition to the Biden administration's other efforts to cancel education debt.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, George W, Bush, it's, Mark Kantowitz, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Harris, Trump Organizations: Biden, U.S . Department, Public, Consumer Financial, Bureau, U.S . Department of Education
U.S. President Joe Biden speaks as he announces a new plan for federal student loan relief during a visit to Madison Area Technical College Truax Campus, in Madison, Wisconsin, U.S, April 8, 2024. But the Biden administration official told CNBC that the Department of Education had only instructed loan servicers to get ready for the debt cancellation. The program is the third Biden administration effort to forgive student debt to end up blocked by Republican-led legal challenges. In June 2023, the Supreme Court ruled that the administration's first attempt to cancel up to $400 billion in student debt without prior authorization from Congress was unconstitutional. Two months ago, a federal appeals court temporarily halted Biden's new affordable repayment plan for student loan borrowers, known as SAVE.
Persons: Joe Biden, Joe Biden's, Miguel Cardona, servicers, Randal Hall, Mark Kantrowitz, Kantrowitz, Biden, Hall, Luke Herrine Organizations: Madison Area Technical, Truax, Biden, U.S . Department of Education, AGs, of Education, CNBC, Department of Education, DOE, Missouri Attorney General's, Department, Republican, SAVE, University of Alabama Locations: Madison , Wisconsin, U.S, Georgia, Augusta , Georgia, Missouri, Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, North Dakota, Ohio
Alistair Berg | Digitalvision | Getty ImagesThe Biden administration's new affordable repayment plan, known as SAVE, may be on hold for months —or longer — amid a slew of legal challenges. The White House says roughly 8 million people are enrolled in SAVE, or the Saving on a Valuable Education plan. Why the SAVE plan is on holdThe SAVE plan has been a magnet for controversy ever since the Biden administration rolled out the program in the summer of 2023, describing it as "the most affordable student loan plan ever." Indeed, the terms of the new income-driven repayment plan are the most generous to date. However, borrowers pursuing student loan forgiveness should still explore their options, said Elaine Rubin, director of corporate communications at Edvisors, which helps students navigate college costs and borrowing.
Persons: Alistair Berg, Digitalvision, Biden, they're, Elaine Rubin Organizations: SAVE, Republican, U.S . Department of Education, Education Department Locations: Edvisors
Kevin Lamarque | ReutersThe Biden administration is sending emails to tens of millions of borrowers this week about its new plans to cancel student debt. The Department of Education estimates that at least 25 million borrowers could qualify. The same day the Supreme Court blocked President Joe Biden's first attempt at sweeping student loan forgiveness, Biden announced that the White House would try to deliver the relief another way. People who are already eligible for student loan forgiveness under one of the government's existing programs but just haven't yet applied. The Education Department is expected to publish its final rule on the debt relief sometime in October.
Persons: Joe Biden, Kevin Lamarque, Biden, Joe Biden's, IRAs, Luke Herrine, Herrine, Mark Kantrowitz, Kantrowitz, Will Organizations: Madison Area Technical, Truax, Reuters, U.S . Department of Education, CNBC, of Education, Education Department, Finance, University of Alabama Locations: Madison , Wisconsin, U.S
President Joe Biden delivers remarks on new Administration efforts to cancel student debt and support borrowers at the White House on October 04, 2023 in Washington, DC. Kevin Dietsch | Getty ImagesSAVE plan mired in legal troublesThe Biden administration rolled out the SAVE plan in the summer of 2023, describing it as "the most affordable student loan plan ever." Indeed, the terms of the new income-driven repayment plan are the most generous to date, making it controversial among critics of debt forgiveness. So far, around 8 million borrowers have signed up for SAVE, according to the White House. SAVE comes with two key provisions that legal challenges have targeted: It has lower monthly payments than any other IDR plan, and it leads to quicker debt erasure for those with small balances.
Persons: Joe Biden, Kevin Dietsch, Biden Organizations: White, SAVE Locations: Washington , DC
US President Joe Biden speaks about student loan relief at Madison College in Madison, Wisconsin, on April 8, 2024. The Biden administration announced it will cancel $1.2 billion in student debt for 35,000 workers, as a result of its recent fixes to a popular debt relief program for public service workers. But the program has been plagued by problems, making people who qualified for the relief a rarity in the past. Under the Biden administration, the U.S. Department of Education gave borrowers a second chance to qualify, as long as they'd been making payments on their loans and working for an eligible employer. The Biden administration has so far cleared $69.2 billion in student debt for 946,000 borrowers under PSLF, according to the Education Department.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, Harris, Education Miguel Cardona, George W, Bush Organizations: Madison College, Biden, Public, Education, U.S . Department of Education, Education Department Locations: Madison , Wisconsin
Many young conservatives also support student loan cancellation, with 49% of Gen Z and millennial Republicans surveyed saying some or all outstanding education debt should be erased. As president, Trump called for the elimination of the U.S. Department of Education's existing loan relief programs, including the popular Public Service Loan Forgiveness initiative. He also wanted to slash the department's budget, and his administration halted a regulation aimed at providing loan forgiveness to those defrauded by their schools. He has repeatedly attacked Biden's loan relief policies, and he said in a campaign video in late 2023 that he wants to close the Education Department altogether. For critics of broad student loan forgiveness, Biden's new plan looks a lot like his first.
Persons: Joe Biden's, Ryan Walker, Walker, Gen, Z, Trump, Biden's, Biden, Andrew Bailey, Bailey Organizations: Republican, Bloomberg, Getty, Biden, Heritage Action, America, U.S . Department, Public, Education Department, Supreme Locations: Kansas, Missouri, SocialSphere, U.S, . Missouri, Arkansas , Iowa , Kansas , Nebraska, South Carolina
US President Joe Biden gestures after speaking about student loan debt relief at Madison Area Technical College in Madison, Wisconsin, April 8, 2024. A federal appeals court will allow a key part of President Joe Biden's student loan relief plan to resume as the legal challenges against it unfold. The SAVE plan was his biggest accomplishment to date in delivering relief to student loan borrowers. Last week, just as the Biden administration prepared to lower borrowers' monthly payments under the SAVE plan, a federal judge in Kansas issued an injunction blocking it from doing so. The appeals court ruling will allow the Biden administration to go ahead with lowering borrowers' monthly payments.
Persons: Joe Biden, Joe Biden's, Biden Organizations: Madison Area Technical College, 10th Circuit U.S, Valuable Education, Biden, SAVE, of Justice Locations: Madison , Wisconsin, Kansas
He applauds the Biden administration's efforts to extend federal student loan relief and access to capital to entrepreneurs, for example. Today, Trump leads Biden in Georgia by 43% to 38%, according to a new Atlanta Journal-Constitution survey of likely voters, an edge just outside its 3.1% margin of error. Social issues are business issues," said Molly Dickinson, founder of Banner Day, a branding agency that works closely with "traditionally underserved" entrepreneurs. "Small-business owners make business decisions based on how comfortable they feel in their home lives and in their everyday lives." "Business has been OK," Chey said, but food and labor costs have taken a toll.
Persons: Ryan Wilson, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Wilson, applauds, Biden, Trump, Deonte Atkins, Atkins, I'm, he's, they've, Black, hadn't, Bill Clinton, Rafael Warnock, Jon Ossoff, Molly Dickinson, Dickinson, Rich Chey, Chey's, Chey, We're Organizations: CNN, Turner Entertainment Networks, Atlanta, Area Development, White, Za'Acai, Republican, Democratic, Biden's, Sens, Trump, GOP, Banner Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, Atlanta, Houston, Georgia, Midtown Atlanta, Ukraine, Israel, New York, Atlanta's Fulton
Student loan relief on pause correction
  + stars: | 2024-06-26 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Judge Ross agreed with the states that the relief plan would likely reduce the fees the government pays to the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority, or Mohela, for servicing its federal student loans. An earlier version misstated the name of the agency.
Persons: Ross Organizations: Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority Locations: Missouri
Cody Gude was counting the seconds until July when his monthly student loan payment was scheduled to drop to $100 from $200. But then he saw headlines on Monday that major parts of the Saving on a Valuable Education, or SAVE, plan were on pause. The U.S. Department of Justice is expected to appeal the preliminary injunctions, but for now, millions of student loan borrowers are disappointed and angry that they won't see the relief they expected in just a matter of days. Gude's student loan servicer, Nelnet, already updated his monthly bill to reflect the lower amount. (Under SAVE, many borrowers pay just 5% of their discretionary income toward their debt each month instead of the previous 10% requirement, and millions of borrowers have a $0 monthly payment.)
Persons: Joe Biden, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, Cody Gude, servicer, Gude Organizations: Education Secretary, White House, Valuable Education, Biden, U.S . Department of Justice, Finance, Social Security Workers Locations: Washington , DC, Tampa , Florida, Kansas, Missouri
CNN —Joe Biden is pushing progressives who are already sour on his presidency to the limit with a tough new executive action barring most asylum applications from migrants crossing the US-Mexico border illegally. Of all issues tested, Biden recorded his lowest approval rating on immigration in a CNN poll in February — just 30%. Progressives face their own dilemmaBiden would never say it bluntly in public, but his gamble with progressives carries an implicit question — where else are they going to go? Some Haley supporters on Tuesday welcomed Biden’s immigration actions, CNN’s Kit Maher reported. “While many Haley voters continue to have policy differences, this common-sense action is a clear step in the right direction to address one of the top priorities of many Haley voters,” the Haley Voters Working Group, a coalition of approximately 25 conservative Haley supporters, posted on X.
Persons: CNN — Joe Biden, Donald Trump’s, Biden, Benjamin Netanyahu, doesn’t, Trump, , , ” Sen, Alex Padilla, CNN’s Manu Raju, ” Biden, Pramila Jayapal, Greg Casar, Republicans “, Ayanna Pressley, He’s, he’s, Sen, Bernie Sanders, Republican demagogue, Adolf Hitler’s, Rashida Tlaib, “ We’re, ” Tlaib, Biden’s, Joe Biden, ” Kate Bedingfield, Nikki Haley, Haley, CNN’s Kit Maher, Amanda Stewart Sprowls Organizations: CNN, Republicans, Trump, White, Progressives, Central America, Democratic, California Democrat, Congressional Progressive Caucus, Biden can’t, Republican, Texas, Massachusetts, Congressional District, Michigan Democratic, Israel, Biden White House, South Carolina Gov, Haley Locations: Mexico, Gaza, , South, Central, California, Washington, America, Vermont, Michigan, Israel, Arizona
US President Joe Biden announces student loan relief with Education Secretary Miguel Cardona (R) on August 24, 2022 in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, DC. Olivier Douliery | AFP | Getty ImagesThe Biden administration fixes to the country's $1.6 trillion student loan system have resulted in regular announcements to forgive large shares of that debt. In total, the U.S. Department of Education has canceled almost $160 billion in federal student loan debt for nearly 4.6 million borrowers while President Joe Biden has been in office. Here what to know about the aid programs that have led to that relief. Income-driven repayment plansPublic Service Loan ForgivenessNavigating the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program has been famously difficult.
Persons: Joe Biden, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, Olivier Douliery, Biden, George W, Bush, Federal Perkins Organizations: Education Secretary, White, AFP, Getty, U.S . Department of Education, Public, Consumer Financial, Family Education, Federal, Federal Perkins Loans, Education Department Locations: Washington ,
U.S. President Joe Biden addresses Morehouse College graduates during a commencement ceremony in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., May 19. Biden's commencement address at Morehouse comes as recent polling has showed Black voters, especially young ones, have weakening enthusiasm for the president. Meanwhile, former President Donald Trump's support from Black voters has increased by 9 percentage points. But Biden still has the majority of support among Black voters, at 69% vs. Trump's 18%. Vice President Kamala Harris has spent years reaching out to Black voters over the course of Biden's first term.
Persons: Joe Biden, Morehouse, Donald Trump's, Biden, Biden's, Sebastian Gordon, Kamala Harris, Wally Adeyemo, Steven Horsford, Harris, Adeyemo Organizations: Morehouse College, Morehouse, Black, NBC, NBC News, White House, Georgia, NAACP, state's Democratic, Biden Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, U.S, Gaza, Black, Atlanta, Israel, Detroit, Nevada, Wisconsin
A general view of the atmosphere during The Art Institute of Atlanta commencement ceremony at Riverside EpiCenter on June 17, 2022 in Austell, Georgia. The Biden administration on Wednesday announced that it would forgive more than $6.1 billion in student debt for 317,000 former students of The Art Institutes, the once giant chain of for-profit schools. The relief will go to borrowers who enrolled at any of the dozens of Art Institute campuses across the country between Jan. 1, 2004 and Oct. 16, 2017. "We must continue to protect borrowers from predatory institutions — and work toward a higher education system that is affordable to students and taxpayers," Cardona added. said The Art Institutes falsified average salaries among graduates, among other abuses.
Persons: Biden, Education Miguel Cardona, Cardona, Serena Williams Organizations: Art Institute, Atlanta, Wednesday, The Art Institutes, U.S . Department of Education, Education Management Corporation, Art Institutes, Education, Finance, Treasury Department, Art Locations: Riverside, Austell , Georgia, Iowa , Massachusetts, Pennsylvania
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailJason Furman on the case against student loan relief: We have an economy that hasn't landed softlyJason Furman, Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government economics professor and former CEA chairman, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss why he's against the Biden administration's student loan forgiveness proposal, why he believes the plan is poorly targeted and will make inflation worse, President Biden's budget proposal, FTC's ban on noncompete clauses, the Fed's interest rate outlook, and more.
Persons: Jason Furman, Biden's Organizations: Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, Biden
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