logo
Senate set for final vote on $9B DOGE cuts with necessary votes

Senate set for final vote on $9B DOGE cuts with necessary votes

UPI7 days ago
Director of the Office of Management and Budget Russell Vought speaks to the press after attending the Senate Republican caucus luncheon at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday. He announced the Senate is ready to pass a bill that will codify DOGE cuts of $9 billion. Photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo
July 16 (UPI) -- The U.S. Senate has the votes to pass a bill that would codify congressionally approved appropriations cuts made by the Department of Government Efficiency. The bill would cut $9 billion in spending.
Two Republican senators fought back on sticking points of AIDS funding and tribal-area public radio stations. The GOP resolved the issues to gain the votes.
Three GOP senators voted against the bill: Susan Collins, R-Maine; Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska; and Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.
The final number for both earlier votes was 51-50, with Vice President J.D. Vance casting the tie-breaking votes. The Senate will gather this morning to vote on amendments, then will have a final vote this afternoon. The bill will still have to pass the House of Representatives then move to President Donald Trump for final approval.
The bill had originally planned to cut $9.4 million in spending, but Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., worked out a deal to redirect Interior Department funds to help about 28 radio stations in 14 states that broadcast to tribal lands. The stations are at risk because of $1.1 billion in cuts to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. They provide vital emergency warnings to those areas.
Several other GOP senators held out on the $400 million cut that they believed would hurt the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, created by President George W. Bush. A rescission package was created by Russell Vought, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, to stop cuts to the PEPFAR program.
Murkowski said the rescissions package sets a precedent that undermines the authority of Congress.
"We're lawmakers. We should be legislating. What we're getting now is a direction from the White House and being told, 'This is the priority. We want you to execute on it. We'll be back with you with another round,'" she said. "I don't accept that. I'm going to be voting no."
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., called the bill a "down payment" on reducing the size of the federal government.
"What we're talking about here is one-tenth of 1% of all federal spending," he told reporters.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The president vows to slash medication cost to an unachievable degree.
The president vows to slash medication cost to an unachievable degree.

Yahoo

time7 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The president vows to slash medication cost to an unachievable degree.

President Donald Trump has promised to reduce American drug prices by mathematically impossible figures of up to '1400 percent.' Speaking during a White House event attended by Republican members of Congress and his Cabinet, Trump said he would tackle the long-running issue of high medication costs in the U.S. But Trump did not set any achievable targets for that aim, instead outlining a range of percentages which would yield negative prices, meaning drug companies would have to pay people to take their medications.

Epstein firestorm consumes House
Epstein firestorm consumes House

The Hill

time8 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Epstein firestorm consumes House

Morning Report is The Hill's a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here or using the box below: In today's issue: ▪ Battle over interim US Attorney in NJ ▪ GOP eyes renaming opera house for Melania Trump ▪ Trump unveils Japan, Philippines trade deals House Republicans find themselves cornered by President Trump 's MAGA base, their own pledges of 'transparency' and by Democrats intent on making the most of the Jeffrey Epstein firestorm. The result: The House, embroiled in a rebellion, will flee Washington today and won't return until September. The majority on Tuesday was unable to push past the simmering controversy to take up a pending immigration bill or a rollback of Biden-era regulations because a key House panel customarily loyal to Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) was closing in on a vote on an Epstein-related measure. Johnson hopes that the upcoming August recess will provide time and 'space' for some kind of resolution. 'We're done being lectured on transparency,' the Speaker told reporters Tuesday, hitting what he called Democratic 'side shows.' Epstein, the disgraced New York financier and convicted sex offender who died in a jail cell while awaiting trial in 2019, remains in the headlines more than two weeks after the Justice Department (DOJ) rocked MAGA World with a memo saying it had no additional Epstein files to share. The administration is still laboring to tamp down the controversy. The DOJ and Attorney General Pam Bondi, urged by Trump to release 'credible' investigatory information, asked courts to unseal grand jury transcripts in the case. Two federal judges on Tuesday told the DOJ they need more information. 'The court intends to resolve this motion expeditiously,' they wrote. Still, the administration's actions have also kept the story front and center. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche on Tuesday said he is seeking a meeting with Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell, 63, who is serving a 20-year sentence following her 2021 conviction for sex trafficking and other crimes. Blanche said he planned to ask: 'What do you know?' Trump told reporters on Tuesday that the request to interview Maxwell 'sounds appropriate.' There was no indication the DOJ sought to speak with Maxwell, who is appealing her sentence to the Supreme Court, before issuing its July 7 memo saying an Epstein 'client list' was nonexistent and reaffirming he died by suicide. The DOJ last week urged the court to reject the appeal. Meanwhile, the White House has for days lashed out at a Wall Street Journal report that said Trump had contributed a 'bawdy' letter with his signature for Epstein's 50th birthday in 2003, at the request of Maxwell, for inclusion with notes from other Epstein associates. Trump on Friday sued the Journal and its parent company while the White House banned the outlet from joining its press pool for Trump's trip to Scotland this weekend. ▪ The Hill: Trump fuels Epstein furor he wants to escape. ▪ Politico: Trump's lawsuit against the Journal raises a new constitutional question. The president is wielding lawsuits as both sword and shield. The president, who socialized with Epstein and Maxwell in the 1990s, has said he had no knowledge of criminal allegations during that period. Epstein's legal troubles began when he was accused of molesting a 15-year-old in Palm Beach, Fla., in 2005. He pleaded guilty in Florida in 2008 to two state felony prostitution charges and received a plea deal that was criticized as too lenient. Blanche on Tuesday made his announcement about seeking information from Maxwell within hours of a House Oversight and Government Reform subcommittee vote to subpoena her to talk with lawmakers. During an unrelated hearing, Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) moved to direct the panel to authorize and issue a subpoena for Maxwell to appear for a deposition. It passed by voice vote. 'I want justice for those thousands of young ladies who were abused, and I want the dirt bags of the world to know that we're not going to tolerate it,' Burchett said. Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) is expected to seek a subpoena 'as expeditiously as possible,' a spokesperson said. Comer told reporters he and his team would visit Maxwell in prison for a deposition when details and terms are worked out with her lawyers. The deputy attorney general, previously retained as one of Trump's personal defense lawyers, and Maxwell's attorney, David Oscar Markus, are friends, The Hill's Zach Schonfeld and Ella Lee report in The Gavel newsletter later today. (Click here to sign up.) ' I know a lot of people that have worked with you, I know a lot of people who know you very well,' Blanche told Markus last year while appearing on his podcast. 'I now consider you a friend and someone who I know pretty well. You are by far the best out there, ' he said. There were no indications as of Tuesday, The New York Times reported, that the DOJ's outreach to Maxwell's attorney was tied to a pardon or a possible reduction in her time behind bars. Smart Take with Blake Burman You don't see bipartisanship often in this town, yet alone on immigration. However, a bipartisan effort, the DIGNITY Act, which proposes to grant legal status to some migrants without criminal records, is being relaunched to reform immigration laws. 'The hand that we've been dealt is, we have four decades of [a] broken immigration system in the United States,' Rep. Gabe Evans (R-Colo.) told me. However, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt suggested last week that the measure hasn't been on the administration's radar. 'The president has made it very clear he will not support amnesty for illegal aliens in any way,' she said. While this measure has the support of several House Republicans, the White House made it clear the president has other priorities for his immigration agenda at the moment. Burman hosts 'The Hill' weeknights, 6p/5c on NewsNation. 3 Things to Know Today The Environmental Protection Agency is moving to jettison a landmark 2009 ' endangerment finding ' that forms the climate basis for federal greenhouse gas emission limits on vehicles and power plants. Columbia University on Tuesday said it punished students it maintains were involved in pro-Palestinian campus demonstrations last year and in May. The university wants the Trump administration to restore $400 million in federal funding. Elon Musk may pivot back into the political realm, SpaceX warned investors. The SpaceX CEO split from Trump in recent months after serving as a senior adviser and then vowed to launch a new party. Leading the Day SHUTDOWN STRATEGY: Democrats remain divided over how hard to press their leverage with Trump and his GOP allies in a government funding bill that needs to pass by Sept. 30 to avoid a shutdown. Senate Democrats held a tense lunch meeting Tuesday to discuss their plan for how to vote on the first spending bill to reach the floor — the military construction-Veterans Affairs appropriations bill — as well as their strategy for how to handle the end-of-September government funding deadline. Some Democratic senators want Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) to come out of the gate hard ahead of the September deadline and make it clear that the party will not accept another partisan stopgap, a bold stance that could raise the risk of a shutdown. Schumer didn't make his strategy clear on the Senate floor on Monday, instead accusing Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) and Republicans of being 'obedient' to Trump. 'It's hard to negotiate a budget with Republicans right now because they have demonstrated that they will cut a deal and then turn around and change the deal solely to benefit themselves,' said Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). 'That's not a deal, that's like cutting a deal to buy a car, and then long after the price has been paid, the Republicans want to come and repossess the tires. It doesn't work that way.' ▪ Axios: Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 's push to overhaul government health programs is extending to the troubled U.S. organ donation system. SPECIAL COUNSEL?: Speaker Johnson said he is open to the idea of appointing a special counsel to probe alleged manufactured intelligence from former White House officials. His comments to the Christian Broadcasting Network come after Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard released a report Friday alleging Obama-era officials manipulated intel related to Russian interference in the 2016 election. 'And I do expect that whether there's a special counsel appointed, which some are suggesting, and/or in conjunction with the House investigations, that we will get the answers and there will be accountability to the extent that we're able to do that,' Johnson said. In a statement Tuesday, a spokesperson for former President Obama dismissed Trump's 'ridiculous' accusation that Obama had committed 'treason' in 2016 by directing his administration to reveal Russian efforts to interfere in that year's presidential election. SANCTIONS: Republican lawmakers, with early support from Democrats, are moving forward to permanently repeal Syria sanctions legislation, in line with Trump's ambition to lift all sanctions on the country. But there's no clear way to passage. Lawmakers are growing squeamish in the wake of sectarian violence in the country and Israel's intervention against Damascus. While Trump has put his support behind Syria's interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, skeptical lawmakers are not so quick to brush over his terrorist past. The Washington Post reports that escalations of violence in Syria have led to a U.S. envoy reaffirming Washington's support for Syria's new government. (More on Syria below.) Where and When The House meets at 10 a.m. The Senate will convene at 10 a.m. The White House daily press briefing is scheduled at 1 p.m. The president at 5 p.m. will address a Washington event focused on artificial intelligence (AI) and 'Winning the AI Race' hosted in Washington by the 'All‑In Podcast' and the Hill & Valley Forum. Trump will return to the White House in the evening. Zoom In COURTS: Alina Habba, the interim U.S. attorney in New Jersey since March and a former personal Trump lawyer, was not retained by a panel of the U.S. District Court on Tuesday. In a terse standing order, the court tapped lawyer Desiree Leigh Grace before the expiration of Habba's 120-day temporary term. The order signed by U.S. District Judge Renée Marie Bumb, the district's chief judge, said it took effect Tuesday. Hours later, however, the Department of Justice took the bold move of announcing it had 'removed' Grace without announcing who would replace her. Grace was Habba's first assistant before district judges elevated her to the top job. Habba has been awaiting Senate confirmation. Previous Justice Departments have recognized that district judges have the authority to name a U.S. attorney if the president's nominee is not acted upon by the Senate within 120 days. ' This Department of Justice does not tolerate rogue judges — especially when they threaten the President's core Article II powers,' Bondi wrote on social media platform X while announcing Grace's removal. Early in her interim term, Habba's leadership came under scrutiny following the arrests and charges against Newark Mayor Ras Baraka (D) and Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-N.J.) stemming from an incident at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility. Although a trespassing count against Baraka was dropped, McIver is still fighting her criminal charges in court. She has pleaded not guilty. ▪ The New York Times: Democratic attorneys general from 21 states sued the Trump administration over its attempts to restrict access to federal health and safety net programs for immigrants without legal status. FEDERAL RESERVE: Trump has backed off of his threats to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell — for now. The president appeared to reach a breaking point with Powell last week when he told Republican lawmakers he would likely be nixing the Fed chair 'soon.' But he has since backed off, while officials and outside voices have warned about the impacts to the markets. 'I think he's done a bad job, but he's going to be out pretty soon anyway,' Trump told reporters at the White House on Tuesday. 'Eight months, he'll be out.' Much like he does with his tariff threats — which has created the concept of the Wall Street 'TACO' trade, an acronym that stands for 'Trump Always Chickens Out' — he floated the idea of forcing Powell out and pulled back. ▪ The Hill: Treasury Department Secretary Scott Bessent on Tuesday defended the monetary independence of the Federal Reserve after getting caught in the crossfire between Trump and The Wall Street Journal. KENNEDY CENTER: House Republicans are pushing to rename the Kennedy Center's famed opera house to honor first lady Melania Trump. GOP members of the Appropriations Committee approved an amendment to the interior, environment and related agencies annual spending bill that would rename the opera house in the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts the 'First Lady Melania Trump Opera House.' The move came months after Trump, in an unprecedented move that was met with criticism, overhauled the Kennedy Center's board and named himself as its chair after accusing the performing arts institution of being too 'woke.' TRUMP VS. SPORTS TEAMS: Sports teams are holding steady after Trump injected himself into the debate over their names, some of which were changed after Native American groups deemed them insensitive. The president has put pressure on the Washington Commanders to revert to their former name, the Redskins, upending what appeared to be a settled issue when he threatened to use the power of the presidency to hold up the Commanders' plans to build a new stadium in Washington, D.C. While it came as a surprise to local leaders and team officials, it was yet another instance of Trump wading into sports for political purposes. 'Sports is one of the many passions of this president, and he wants to see the name of that team changed,' Leavitt said Monday. 'I think you've seen the president gets involved in a lot of things that most presidents have not. He's a non-traditional president.' D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) said her aim to bring the Commanders back to the nation's capital 'would not change despite' Trump's threat. The head of the Cleveland Guardians baseball team, meanwhile, said his team would not revert its name either. Trump posted on social media they should readopt their old name, the Cleveland Indians, which was changed after the 2021 season amid pressure from Native American groups. ▪ The Washington Post: What Trump can (and can't) do about the Commanders' name and the RFK Stadium deal. ROUNDUP: ▪ The Washington Post: NPR's news chief is leaving the company, days after federal funding cuts. ▪ The Hill: Virginia Republicans are raising alarm bells about the state of Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears's (R) campaign in the state's closely watched gubernatorial race. ▪ The Hill: State laws requiring the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms keep losing in court. But outside advocates believe supporters of laws in Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas are actively trying to get the cases before the Supreme Court, where they stand a better chance. Elsewhere TRADE DEALS: Trump on Tuesday announced two new trade deals — with the Philippines and Japan — ahead of his Aug. 1 tariff deadline. Trump's trade deal with Japan would see the U.S. impose a 15 percent tariff on Japanese goods. Trump posted on Truth Social that Japan would invest $550 billion in projects in the U.S., without offering specifics, adding Japan would open its markets to U.S. automobiles, rice and other agricultural products. In an Oval Office meeting, Trump and Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. announced a trade agreement for 19 percent tariffs on goods coming from the Philippines. American goods shipped there won't be charged a tariff. However, it was not immediately apparent whether the two leaders formally signed a document; similar to other recent trade agreement announcements, few details were revealed. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent emphasized Tuesday that next week's cutoff is a 'hard deadline' for countries that do not negotiate trade deals with the U.S., as businesses brace for Trump to impose tariff rates of between 20 percent and 50 percent. The administration has downplayed any negative repercussions from the tariffs while arguing they will bring back U.S. manufacturing. ▪ CNBC: How Europe's 'trade bazooka' could be a last resort against Trump's tariffs. ▪ The New York Times: The Trump administration said the Indonesian government had agreed to roll back multiple trade barriers that U.S. companies have complained about and make purchases of American oil, gas and farm products. ISRAEL: The U.S. will mediate a meeting between Israeli and Syrian officials on Thursday in an effort to reach security understandings regarding the situation in southern Syria, Axios reports. Last week, Israel bombed a convoy of Syrian army tanks that were heading to the city of Sweida to respond to violent clashes between a Druze militia and armed Bedouin tribesmen. Israel also launched strikes on Damascus. Leavitt confirmed Monday that Trump was unhappy with the Israeli airstrikes and called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to 'rectify' the situation. Meanwhile in Gaza, Israeli strikes continued while civilians, including children, died of starvation, Palestinian health officials said. Israel is pushing in an area that had largely been spared from heavy fighting during the 21-month war. ▪ CNN: 'We are watching our colleagues waste away': Aid workers, doctors, journalists risk starvation alongside people in Gaza. ▪ Time magazine: How Israel appears to be gambling with the Trump administration's patience. ▪ The New York Times: Russia and Ukraine are expected to hold another round of peace talks today in Istanbul, but the two countries have flatly rejected each other's demands. Opinion The lunacy of lawfare against the Fed, by The Wall Street Journal editorial board. Trump's Wall Street Journal lawsuit is as dangerous as it is unprecedented, by Austin Sarat, opinion contributor, The Hill. The Closer And finally… 🐍 Under the category of 'you can't make this up,' a man dressed as a pirate who was riding over the weekend on a Chicago-area train lost control of his ball python named Lucius, named after the slithery Harry Potter character Lucius Malfoy. Incredibly, the large snake burrowed inside the train's control panel, which resulted in a call to the Oak Park Fire Department in Illinois, which sent a well-equipped emergency team to the Harlem/Lake Green Line terminal to retrieve the reptile and chronicle the whole thing with photos. Check out the department's pictorial HERE (and don't miss the pirate).

Changes to federal student loans leave aspiring medical students scrambling to cover costs
Changes to federal student loans leave aspiring medical students scrambling to cover costs

Chicago Tribune

time38 minutes ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Changes to federal student loans leave aspiring medical students scrambling to cover costs

Twenty-year-old Eric Mun didn't want to believe it: Only one kid in the family could make it to medical school — and it wasn't going to be him. Mun had done everything right. He graduated high school with honors, earned a scholarship at Northwestern University and breezed through his biology courses. He immigrated to Alabama from Korea as a toddler. From the quiet stretches of the South, he dreamed of helping patients in a pressed white coat. But dreams don't pay tuition. And with new borrowing limits, Mun's family can only support one child through school. 'My parents already implied that my older brother is probably going to be the one that gets to go,' Mun said. President Donald Trump's sweeping 'big, beautiful' tax and spending bill, signed into law earlier this month, imposes strict new caps on federal student loans, capping borrowing for professional schools at $50,000 per year. The measure particularly affects medical students, whose tuition often exceeds $300,000 over four years. Aspiring physicians like Mun have been thrown into financial uncertainty. Many members of the medical community say the measures will send shock waves through a system already laden with economic barriers, discouraging low-income students from pursuing a medical degree. 'It might mean there are people who want to be doctors that can't be doctors because they can't afford it,' said Richard Anderson, president of the Illinois State Medical Society. Before the passage of Trump's budget bill, the Grad PLUS loan program allowed graduate students to borrow their institution's total cost of attendance, including living expenses. The program was slashed as part of a broader overhaul to the federal student loan system. Now, beginning July 1, 2026, most graduate students will be capped at $20,500 in federal loans per year, with a total limit of $100,000. Students in professional schools, like medical, dental or law school, will face the $50,000 annual cap and a total limit of $200,000. Mun's parents work at an automobile assembly plant. Throughout high school, he knew he would have to rely on scholarships and federal loans to pay his way through college. Mun's voice faltered. 'I'm just trying to remain hopeful,' Mun said. Also folded into the bill: the elimination of several Biden-era repayment plans, cuts to Pell Grants and limits to the Parent PLUS loans program, which allows parents of dependent undergraduates to borrow. Proponents of the Republican-backed bill said the curbed borrowing will incentivize medical schools and other graduate programs to lower tuition. The tuition of most Chicago-area medical schools is nearly $300,000 for four years, not including cost-of-living expenses. Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine has a $465,000 price tag after accounting for those indirect costs, according to the school's website. Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science trails closely behind at nearly $464,000. 'One of the main concerns about the Grad PLUS program is money that is going to subsidize institutions rather than extending access to students,' said Lesley Turner, an associate professor at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy. Still, many medical professionals expressed doubt that schools will adjust their costs in response to the bill. Tuition for both private and public schools has been steadily climbing for decades, up 81% from 2001 after adjusting for inflation, according to the Association of American Medical some evidence that Grad PLUS may have contributed to those tuition hikes. A study co-authored by Turner in 2023 found that prices increased 65 cents per dollar after the program's introduction in 2006. There was also little indication that Grad PLUS had fulfilled its intended goal of expanding access to underrepresented students. But Turner cautioned against the abrupt reversal of the program. After accounting for inflation, the lifetime borrowing limits now placed on graduate students are lower than they were in 2005, she said. Many students may turn to private loans to cover the gap, often at higher interest rates. More than half of medical students relied on Grad PLUS loans, according to AAMC. The median education debt for indebted medical students is around $200,000, with most repayment plans lasting 10 to 20 years. The median stipend for doctors' first year post-MD was just $65,100 in 2024. 'I think for many reasons, it would have been reasonable to put some sort of limit on Grad PLUS loans, but I think this is a very blunt way of doing it,' Turner said. In a high-rise on Northwestern's downtown campus last week, 20 undergraduate students and alums from local colleges gathered for the Chicago Cancer Health Equity Collaborative Fellows program. The eight-week summer intensive offers aspiring medical professionals a deep dive into cancer health disparities information and research. Participants like Mun have been left reeling after the flurry of federal cuts. Alexis Chappel, a 28-year-old graduate of Northeastern Illinois University, watched her dad struggle with addiction growing up. She was deeply moved by the doctors who supported his recovery, and it inspired her to pursue medicine. But she has no idea how she'll cover tuition. 'I feel like it's in God's hands at this point,' Chappel said. 'I just felt like it's a direct attack on Black and brown students who plan on going to medical school.' Just 10% of medical students are Black and 12% are Latino, according to AAMC enrollment data. Socioeconomic diversity is also limited: A 2018 analysis found that 24% of students came from the wealthiest 5% of U.S. Pendergrast, who graduated from Feinberg in 2023, relied entirely on Grad PLUS loans to fund her medical education. Juggling classes and clinicals, she had little money saved and no steady stream of income. Pendergrast was so strapped for cash that she enrolled in SNAP benefits — a program also cut under Trump's budget bill. Now an anesthesiologist at University of Michigan Health, she's documented her concerns on TikTok for her 48,000 followers. 'It's not going to improve representation, and it's not going to improve access,' Pendergrast said. 'It's going to act as a deterrent for people who otherwise would be excellent physicians.' For low-income students, the application process is already fraught with economic obstacles, Pendergrast said. Metrics like GPA and the Medical College Admissions Test, or MCAT, are heavily weighted in admissions, and may disadvantage students from underresourced schools. Many students also lack mentorships or networks to guide them through the process, she noted. 'I think the average medical student is going to be richer and whiter, and not from rural areas and not from underserved communities,' Pendergrast said. The elimination of Grad PLUS loans comes amid a mounting nationwide physician shortage. A recent AAMC report predicted a shortfall of 86,000 physicians by 2036. Meanwhile, a significant portion of the workforce is poised to enter retirement: The U.S. population aged 65 and older is expected to grow 34.1% over the next decade. The shortage is particularly concentrated in primary care. In practice, that means longer waiting times for patients, and an increased caseload on physicians, who may already suffer from burnout. 'If the goal is truly to make America healthy again, then we need to have a strong physician workforce … We should be coming up with ideas to make it more accessible for people who want to be doctors as opposed to hindering that,' Anderson said. Sophia Tully, co-president of the Minority Association of Pre-Med Students at Northwestern, said she and her peers have struggled to reconcile with a system that often feels stacked against them. The 21-year-old plans on taking an extra gap year before medical school in an effort to save money. Tully summed up the environment on campus: 'For lack of a better word, people are panicking.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store