Summary
The Biden administration has moved to forgive $4.7 billion in U.S. loans to Ukraine as part of a $9.4 billion loan package authorized by Congress in April to support Ukraine’s government during its war with Russia.
State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller confirmed the decision, which Congress could still block.
The Senate is set to vote on a disapproval motion introduced by Senator Rand Paul, though bipartisan support for Ukraine remains strong.
President Biden is expediting aid ahead of his term’s end, amid concerns President-elect Trump may restrict future support.
Dude what about the student loan forgiveness you got filibustered on?
Lol when this started I was a fine candidate for forgiveness. Now my income has increased and they lowered the bar so I’m disqualified. Really glad I’m on this side but it will be 5 years before I can pay off what would have been forgiven. The ceiling is a joke anywhere that isn’t a rural environment.
Means testing is just a poverty trap. My family personally earned a bit more money and the state of California now said “Cool, you no longer qualify for free health insurance, you gotta pay.”
And while it’s not a lot, its a few dollars a month, it has less options. Not even medical transportation in the rural area we live in.
… really? They’re still being fought in the courts. Like, what the fuck commentary is this? “What about the thing you’ve been trying to do this whole time?” Yeah, they’re still doing that.
I see that they are fighting for PSLF forgiveness in courts.
Not the broad 20k forgiveness for all borrowers.
Do you have information otherwise? I’m interested in any discourse I may have missed on the matter.
Supreme court shot down the 20k for pell grant recipients and 10k for non pell grant recipients plan, and basically said that at that scale should require congress. So all the smaller programs have been calibrated to try to survive the court battles.