N.Y., has introduced legislation that would slash student loan interest rates to one percent and permit federal borrowers to retroactively refinance their debt.
Pointing to former congressman Tulsi Gabbard and outgoing congressman Matt Gaetz, the New York Post editorial board implored the president-elect to “rethink” his choices in an op-ed published on Tuesday. Gabbard was nominated as director of national intelligence while Gaetz was named as pick for attorney general.
According to CNN on Tuesday (Nov. 19), the office of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg announced its agreement to postpone Donald Trump’s sentencing. The decision would allow time to address the president-elect’s anticipated motion to dismiss his highly publicized hush money case.
New York prosecutors oppose any effort to dismiss President-elect Donald Trump’s hush money conviction, but they expressed some openness Tuesday to delaying sentencing until after his impending second term.
The judge in President-elect Donald Trump's criminal hush money case has indefinitely postponed sentencing, which had been scheduled for Nov. 26.
President-elect Donald Trump's scheduled Nov. 26 sentencing hearing has been adjourned as a New York judge weighs next steps following the election.
New York prosecutors on Tuesday agreed to postpone further proceedings in Donald Trump’s hush-money case, but opposed the president-elect’s bid to dismiss his conviction on 34 felonies. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg,
The Manhattan prosecutor who won the only criminal conviction of Donald Trump faces a Tuesday deadline to say how he thinks the case should proceed in light of the former president’s reelection.
President-elect Donald Trump's criminal conviction should be tossed out because he was elected president, his lawyers say.
A decision on if and when President-elect Donald Trump will be sentenced in the hush money case against him in New York is coming soon while his other legal challenges loom.
Trump, who has falsely claimed that the US ranks last in education, has repeatedly vowed to eliminate the $79 billion US Department of Education. “I’m dying to get back to do this,” he said in September. Whether he succeeds will depend on whether he has congressional support.