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A move that would've surged married student-loan borrowers' payments was a mistake, Trump's admin says

A move that would've surged married student-loan borrowers' payments was a mistake, Trump's admin says

Married student-loan borrowers won't have to worry about changes that could increase their monthly payments after all.
After the American Federation of Teachers sued President Donald Trump's administration for taking down online access to income-driven repayment applications, the Department of Education wrote in a legal filing that married student-loan borrowers who file separate tax returns would have their combined income counted to calculate monthly payments.
That would've surged some borrowers' payments because it would mean that monthly payments on an income-driven repayment plan would be based on a higher combined income.
The Department of Education corrected that in a legal filing last week, saying that the change to married borrowers' payment calculations "was erroneous." Instead, Acting Under Secretary James Bergeron said that married borrowers filing separately would have the spouse counted in the family size to calculate monthly payments.
"But, to be clear, the inclusion of a spouse for purposes of determining family size does not involve the consideration of spousal income," the filing said.
So, for now, the process for monthly payment calculations will stay the same, and married borrowers who file taxes separately do not have to worry about affording payments based on the combined spousal income.
The Education Department said it initially removed online access to income-driven repayment applications as a "required consequence" of a federal court blocking the SAVE plan. SAVE, which was created by former President Joe Biden to give borrowers cheaper monthly payments and a shorter timeline to debt relief, has been blocked since last summer following a lawsuit from GOP-led states.
Borrowers enrolled in SAVE are on administrative forbearance pending a final legal decision, and they can choose to apply for a different repayment plan if they want to continue making payments and earning credit toward the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program.
However, there is not yet a timeline for when servicers will begin to process the backlog of income-driven repayment applications.
"This timeline is due to the servicers' internal procedures," Bergeron wrote. "Specifically, before servicers can begin to process applications, they must update the processing rules in their systems according to the terms of their contracts with Education."

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The GOP's latest megabill casualties
The GOP's latest megabill casualties

Politico

time22 minutes ago

  • Politico

The GOP's latest megabill casualties

Presented by IN TODAY'S EDITION:— House GOP to ax some megabill proposals— Mfume now pro-seniority amid Oversight race— MAHA spat between GOP senators, RFK Jr. House Republicans will vote to make difficult changes to the GOP megabill today in an attempt to keep the bill on track in the Senate. The House Rules Committee teed up a provision Tuesday night that would scrub the House-passed bill of problems the Senate parliamentarian flagged as threats to the measure's filibuster-skirting power, our Jennifer Scholtes, Meredith Lee Hill and Katherine Tully-McManus report. The proposals getting axed include: — Cracking down on the fraud-plagued employee retention tax credit created during the pandemic. House Republicans were relying on this for $6.3 billion in savings to offset spending in the bill. — $2 billion for Pentagon military intelligence programs and $500 million to develop missiles. Losing this particularly irked many House GOP lawmakers. — Allowing mining in a protected wilderness area in the Midwest. The contentious provision would have reversed then-President Joe Biden's move to protect the Boundary Waters area. — Part of the policy ending increased food aid for households that also qualify for heating and cooling assistance. Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins previously complained about this. — Extending a policy requiring federal agencies to procure a certain amount of biofuels or bio-based products. By cutting these items, the bill retains its ability to pass the Senate with a simple majority, rather than 60 votes. While Senate Republicans are still mulling their own tweaks to the bill, and could seek to restore some of the measures now on the chopping block, these changes need to be fixed now before the Senate votes on it. More policies could get slashed. In the coming weeks, expect Senate Republicans to start getting their first 'Byrd bath' rulings from the parliamentarian on additional GOP proposals under challenge from Democrats. To help avoid a tough whip effort today, House GOP leaders are embedding the fixes in the procedural measure they're using to set up debate on the $9.4 billion rescissions package — legislation that even the most conservative Republicans support. That won't be the case when the bill comes back from the Senate in a few weeks, as leaders hope. GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING. We hope to see you all at the Congressional Baseball Game tonight! Follow our live coverage at the Inside Congress blog at and email your Inside Congress scribes at mmccarthy@ lkashinsky@ bleonard@ and crazor@ THE SKED The House is in session and voting on the rule for the rescissions package that includes special language to amend the reconciliation package at 4:15 p.m. — Democratic Leaders Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer will have a news conference on the GOP megabill at 10 a.m. — Appropriations will have a full committee markup of the fiscal 2026 Agriculture-FDA bill at 10 a.m. — Agriculture will hear testimony from Secretary Brooke Rollins at 10 a.m. — Ways and Means will hear testimony from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent at 10 a.m. — The Republican Study Committee will have its weekly lunch at 12:30 p.m. The Senate is in session and voting on ending debate on Billy Long's nomination to be IRS commissioner at noon, on proceeding with landmark cryptocurrency legislation at 2 p.m. and on discharging resolutions that block the sale of certain arms to Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates around 4 p.m. — Environment and Public Works will have a hearing on Sean McMaster's nomination to be administrator of the Federal Highway Administration at 10 a.m. — Commerce will have a hearing on Bryan Bedford's nomination for FAA administrator at 10 a.m. — Energy and Natural Resources will have a hearing on the president's fiscal 2026 budget request for the Interior Department at 10 a.m. — Appropriations will have subcommittee hearings on the president's fiscal 2026 budget request for the Defense Department with testimony from Secretary Pete Hegseth at 10 a.m., for the Forest Service with testimony from Chief Tom Schultz at 10:30 a.m., for HUD with testimony from Secretary Scott Turner at 3:30 p.m. and for Treasury with testimony from Bessent at 4 p.m. — Republicans will have a conference meeting at 2:30 p.m. — The Congressional Baseball Game will start at 7:05 p.m. at Nationals Park. 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Some complicating factors for Mfume: He's the oldest in a four-person field that includes two candidates in their forties. Rep. Stephen Lynch, 70, has more seniority on the panel. Rep. Robert Garcia won the Congressional Hispanic Caucus' endorsement. Mfume is unlikely to win official support from the Congressional Black Caucus because another member, Rep. Jasmine Crockett, is also in the race. And Mfume's 2004 departure from the NAACP was marred by sexual harassment allegations, though Mfume denies wrongdoing. Senior Republicans skipping Trump's military bash Top Republicans including Senate Majority Leader John Thune, Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise and the chairs of the House and Senate Armed Services committees won't be attending the president's multimillion-dollar military parade Saturday, Lisa, Calen and Mia report. In fact, among 50 Republicans we surveyed this week, only seven said they were staying in town to attend the Army's 250th birthday celebration (which is also Trump's 79th) — Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Byron Donalds, Elise Stefanik, Cory Mills, Rich McCormick, John McGuire and Lisa McClain. The White House is shrugging off the absences; an official granted anonymity to discuss planning for the event said senior military leaders and at least 15 Cabinet secretaries are slated to attend. And GOP lawmakers broadly said they support the spectacle that could cost upwards of $40 million, though a few are balking at the price tag. Thune says Trump's tax promises are here to stay Thune said Tuesday that Trump's campaign-trail tax pledges will be included in the Senate's version of the megabill, even as some Republicans mull scaling back key provisions to help expand business tax incentives, our Jordain Carney reports. 'The president, as you know, campaigned hard on no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, social security, interest on car loans,' Thune told reporters. 'They were addressed in the House version of the bill and I expect they will be in the Senate, as well.' Thune also said he'll likely return to the White House for another megabill meeting with Trump before week's end. Meanwhile, as negotiations continue over the Senate's megabill changes, SALT Republicans are seeking a meeting with Thune over the state-and-local-tax deduction, which could happen as soon as today. House Freedom Caucus members Chip Roy and Scott Perry crossed the Capitol Tuesday to meet with fellow deficit hawks Sens. Mike Lee, Rick Scott and Ron Johnson, Jordain scooped. Scalise skeptical of Texas redistricting push Count Scalise among the Republicans unnerved by the White House's push for Texas lawmakers to redraw the state's 38 U.S. House districts. Scalise on Tuesday cautioned that the effort — pitched as a measure to preserve the GOP majority in the midterms — shouldn't inadvertently put incumbents at risk. 'You have to balance a lot of things,' he told reporters. Members of the Texas GOP House delegation didn't show much enthusiasm for the idea in their closed-door meeting Monday night, a person familiar with the discussions told Nicholas. They'll huddle with White House officials Thursday to discuss the redistricting plan further. Johnson backs Trump's military force in LA Speaker Mike Johnson is standing behind Trump's decision to dispatch both the National Guard and the Marines to Los Angeles amid clashes between protestors and law enforcement over ICE. He said there's a 'clear distinction' between condemning violent protesters in California and Trump pardoning rioters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, though he declined to elaborate. Meanwhile, Collins broke with GOP leadership Tuesday over the issue. 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TODAY'S QUESTION, from Paul: William Henry Harrison had the shortest tenure as president. Who had the second shortest tenure? The first person to correctly guess gets a mention in the next edition of Inside Congress. Send your answers to insidecongress@ CORRECTION: Yesterday's newsletter misstated the time of a House Democratic leaders press conference and misspelled Sang Yi's name — our apologies.

‘Democracy Forward' Compilation Features Tracks From Michael Stipe, Wilco, Brandi Carlile, John Prine and Tyler Childers
‘Democracy Forward' Compilation Features Tracks From Michael Stipe, Wilco, Brandi Carlile, John Prine and Tyler Childers

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

‘Democracy Forward' Compilation Features Tracks From Michael Stipe, Wilco, Brandi Carlile, John Prine and Tyler Childers

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Critics Expose The Massive Constitutional Flaw In Donald Trump's Latest Threat
Critics Expose The Massive Constitutional Flaw In Donald Trump's Latest Threat

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Critics Expose The Massive Constitutional Flaw In Donald Trump's Latest Threat

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