Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Trump cancels Obama’s special immigration program for foreign entrepreneurs – Washington Times

The Trump administration put a hold Monday on an Obama-era policy that was designed to encourage foreign entrepreneurs to settle in the U.S. to build their companies, saying immigration officials are already overwhelmed with more important work.

Its the latest of President Obamas executive actions on immigration to be unwound by President Trump, and it comes a week before the new policy was to take effect.

Under the now-delayed program, foreigners who were trying to build or invest in startup companies were to be granted parole into the U.S., which is special permission to be here with legal status and a work permit and a potential chance at eventual citizenship.

The Obama administration had called the parole another use of discretionary authority.

Mr. Trump, though, has been skeptical of those grants of discretionary power, and ordered his Homeland Security Department to revoke areas where his predecessor was too generous.

In a notice Monday, the department said it was delaying the rule until March 2018, and would likely cancel it altogether.

The department said U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the agency responsible for granting legal immigration benefits such as business visas, tentative deportation amnesties and work permits, is already overwhelmed with those duties and cant spare time to hire and train officers for the entrepreneur parole program.

Those resources are otherwise needed for USCIS to effectively and efficiently carry out its many existing immigration benefit programs facilitating lawful migration into United States, the department said.

Obama officials had predicted about 3,000 entrepreneurs would be eligible each year for parole.

The level of investment was fairly low just 10 percent of companies with as little as $250,000 in capital would have been enough to qualify. Startups had to show they created at least five jobs in order for investors to get a renewal of their parole.

Immigrant-rights groups complained that the Trump administration was being short-sighted.

This is unquestionably a setback for the United States in the global race for talent - we should be encouraging innovators to bring their new ideas, expertise, and unique skills to our country, rather than incentivizing them to put their talents to work for our competitors abroad, said Todd Schulte, president of FWD.us, an immigration advocacy group powered by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.

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Trump cancels Obama's special immigration program for foreign entrepreneurs - Washington Times

Illinois Highway To Be Named After Barack Obama – NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS

Passing a budget wasnt the only thing Illinois lawmakers did last week. They also named a major road after former president Barack Obama.

Anyone whos ever listened to a Chicago traffic report knows the names Edens, Eisenhower, Stevenson, Ryan.

Now, an addition: the Barack Obama Presidential Expressway.

Thats the official designation for Interstate 55, from 294 in the Chicago suburbs south to mile marker 202, near the city of Pontiac.

State Rep. La Shawn Ford, a Chicago Democrat, said its a route the former state-senator would be familiar with.

President Obama traveled 55 on his way to Springfield."

The I-55 designation beat a competing proposal to rename all of 294 after Obama that's the Tri-State Tollway.

The Illinois Department of Transportation doesnt yet have a timeline for when it'll put up signage.

Rep. Ford said Obama wont have the highway to himself.

Paul Simon also has some dedications on the road. And we also have Stevenson, which has some dedications on 55."

The Stevenson is what 55 is called in the Chicago area. The Paul Simon Freeway covers the last part of the interstate before it crosses the Mississippi River heading for St. Louis.

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Illinois Highway To Be Named After Barack Obama - NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS

Obama returns to political fray for a Democratic Party cause – Washington Post

Former president Barack Obama will formally reenter the political fray this week less than six months after leaving office, headlining a fundraiser for a group that could prove critical to the Democratic Partys rebuilding efforts.

Obamas appearance Thursday before a few dozen people at a closed-door event in the District on behalf of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee (NDRC) highlights the balance he is trying to strike as his party seeks to regain its footing at both the state and national levels. Obama does not want to cast a long shadow, in the words of Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez, but he remains a central figure for a party that has yet to settle on a single strategy to combat President Trump.

Perez said in an interview Sunday that while some Democrats have urged Obama recently, Youve got to get out front on issue X or issue Y, the former president wants instead to build the bench for the party. Democrats suffered a greater loss of power during Obamas tenure than under any other two-term president since World War II.

Because tomorrows president is todays state senator. And he knows that very personally, said Perez, referring to Obamas experience as a state senator in Illinois. When you lose 900 state legislative seats, those are people who could have been the next governors and senators and Cabinet positions, and that is something that hes very committed to.

The NDRCs executive director, Kelly Ward, would not say how much the fundraiser is expected to bring in. But she said Obama still has such a microphone to help convince donors to invest in state-level races and help in shining a light on a phenomenon that influences the outcome of elections year after year.

That bully pulpit still very much rests with him, Ward said.

The NDRC aims to influence how state and federal legislative districts are drawn and hopes to create a centralized, strategic hub for a comprehensive redistricting strategy, she said. The groups chairman, former U.S. attorney general Eric H. Holder Jr., and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) also are scheduled to appear.

[Obama, once a party outsider, seeks to restore some of Democrats strength]

Corry Bliss, the Congressional Leadership Fund executive director whose super PAC is affiliated with House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.), said in an interview that Democrats efforts to regain ground will be hampered by the fact that people in the middle think they are out of touch with the problems of ordinary Americans.

Its a brand that is beholden to Nancy Pelosi and liberal, Left Coast elitism, Bliss said. The Democrats couldnt find real America with Nancy Pelosis chauffeur and a map.

Bliss added that the GOP already has multiple groups working on redistricting, and I am confident they will be well funded and well run.

In his final news conference as president in January, Obama said that he would wade into the national political debate only at certain moments where I think our core values may be at stake, including voter suppression. Since then, he has issued statements on some of the Republicans highest-profile assaults on his legacy, including Trumps executive actions to curb immigration and exit the Paris climate agreement, and congressional Republicans efforts to unravel the Affordable Care Act through legislation crafted behind the scenes and without Democrats input.

The fundraiser is a more targeted political act, focused on the upcoming legislative apportionment that will establish the electoral playing field for the next decade.

The process of drawing districts differs by state: some have independent commissions, while most are drawn by state legislators and subject to approval by governors. But even with those variations, the 2017 and 2018 cycle will feature 38 gubernatorial races and 322 state senate races with four-year terms. Perez described it as a 12- or 13-year cycle, because whoever wins is going to control redistricting in a very real way.

In a statement, Obamas spokesman Kevin Lewis said the former president wants to support the committees efforts to address unfair gerrymandering practices that leave too many American voters feeling voiceless in the electoral process.

Restoring fairness to our democracy by advocating for fairer, more inclusive district maps around the country is a priority for President Obama, Lewis said.

One senior Obama adviser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk frankly, said the former president will be supporting efforts that tackle the inequities of our current political system, although he would only weigh in publicly on political questions sparingly.

While still nascent, the new tax-exempt group represents the partys most ambitious effort yet to try to erase the steep disadvantage it faces on the state and federal level due to the maps put in place after the 2010 Census. A recent analysis by New York Universitys Brennan Center for Justice found that lines drawn in battleground states to aid one party over another a process known as gerrymandering provides the GOP with a durable advantage of at least 16 House seats.

The GOPs massive electoral gains in 2010, bolstered by a roughly $30 million effort by party donors, has continued to benefit the party in subsequent elections.

In 2011, when state legislators and governors were drawing districts in many states, Republicans have 22 states in which they held the governors mansion and both legislative chambers, while Democrats controlled 11. The situation has grown even bleaker for Democrats, since they have just six such trifectas now to the GOPs 25.

[These 3 maps show how dominant Republicans are in America after 2016]

But Democrats now see cause for optimism, in part because of several recent legal victories. In May the Supreme Court struck down two North Carolina congressional districts as unconstitutional, finding that lawmakers used race as the dominant factor when crafting their lines. The court has made similar rulings regarding Alabama and Virginia, and has agreed to take up a case regarding gerrymandering in the coming year.

And a federal judges panel in Texas, which found that lawmakers had intentionally discriminated against minority voters in crafting state and U.S. House seats in 2011, has scheduled a trial that will start Monday, which could lead to new maps for these districts in 2018.

Justin Levitt, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, said in an interview that if the justices side with the Democrats in upcoming cases involving Wisconsin and Texas, for example, it will certainly change the way legislatures go about drawing lines.

But he added that the sea wall Republicans have created through state and federal legislative maps has proved durable, and preserves state legislative districts that will make it more difficult to win state legislative seats in the next couple of years.

Even though it is seven years later, that sea wall is still up, and that means Democrats are still fighting uphill, Levitt said.

For that reason, Democrats will strongly focus on critical gubernatorial races in the next couple of years, including in Virginia, New Jersey, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Holder already has spoken at an event on behalf of the Democratic nominee in the Virginia governors race, Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam, and the NDRC is working with multiple state legislative candidates there. It is also weighing whether to back redistricting reform ballot initiatives in Ohio or elsewhere.

In those states where gubernatorial approval is required for a redistricting plan, the race for governor is the largest prize in the competition to ensure ones party does not get completely punished in the redistricting process, said Stanford Law School professor Nathaniel Persily, who has served as a special master or court-appointed expert in New York, Connecticut, Maryland and Georgia to draw nonpartisan redistricting plans.

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Obama returns to political fray for a Democratic Party cause - Washington Post

Trump changes higher ed with rollback of Obama-era consumer protections – Washington Post

Step by step, the Trump administration is walking back policies and rules in higher education that its predecessor said were needed to protect students who rely on federal funding to pursue a degree.

Supporters say the Education Department under President Trump is restoring balance after overreach during the Obama administration led to punitive regulations and aggressive policing that threatened the stability of schools and student loan companies. But consumer advocates say they fear Trump is unraveling years of work to ensure borrowers are placed ahead of profits.

Through the first half of the year, the department led by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has withdrawn, delayed or announced plans to revamp more than a half dozen Obama-era measures involving federal student aid.

The U.S. Department of Educations illegal refusal to implement these protections means that more students will continue to drown in debt, while taxpayers foot the bill, said Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey(D).

[Trump administrations delay of rule to regulate career-training programs sparks protest]

What started as a slow chipping away of Obama administration directives has turned into full-fledged overhaul of regulations.

In March, the department announced schools would be given more time to appeal poor reviews under what is known as the gainful employment rule, which threatens to withhold student aid from vocational programs whose graduates consistently end up with more debt than they can repay.

By June 14, the department announced an effort to rewrite the rule entirely. Weeks later, DeVos said schools would be given another year to comply with certain provisions and tell students how their programs are performing.

The secretarys priority is to put students needs first, and the department is committed to doing just that, said department spokeswoman Liz Hill. Every step taken to reduce regulatory burdens or to enter a negotiated rulemaking process is done with the best interests of students inmind.

[Betsy DeVos delays 2 Obama-era rules designed to protect students from predatory for-profit colleges]

Another much-debated rule is borrower defense to repayment, which erases federal loans for students whose colleges used illegal or deceptive tactics to get them to borrow money to attend. On the books since the 1990s, the rule was revised last year to speed up and simplify the claims process and shift more of the cost of discharging loans ontoschools.

Before those changes could take effect July 1, DeVos suspended them last month and said she would convene a committee to reconsider the matter. That led Healey and 18 other Democratic state attorneys general to file a lawsuit Thursday seeking to prevent any delay of the updated borrower-defense rule.

[Attorneys general sue DeVos over delay of rule to protect students from predatory colleges]

DeVos said her action will have no impact on tens of thousands of pending claims, but some borrowers say the process has already ground to a halt.

In early January, Jessica Madison received a notice from the department approving the forgiveness of $19,000 she amassed in debt for a paralegal program at Everest College in Clearwater, Fla., a for-profit school that was operated by now-defunct Corinthian Colleges. The notice, reviewed by The Washington Post, said the debt would be discharged within 60 to 120 days, but it was not.

Instead, Madison said the government has been garnishing her paycheck to recoup the debt. She said she has struggled to repay the money since leaving Everest in 2009 because it took her nearly three years to land a full-time job.

[Feds found widespread fraud at Corinthian Colleges. Why are students still paying the price?]

I wasnt able to have power for weeks because my checks couldnt cover the bills, Madison said. This has put me in a deep hole that is taking long to crawl out of.

Hill declined to discuss Madisons case. But the department spokeswoman said too many students ... have gotten caught up in a convoluted and confusing process set up by the previous administration.

It is our aim to make sure students are protected from predatory practices, taxpayers are protected and universities and colleges have clear, fair and balanced rules to follow, sheadded.

Hill said the department has discharged debt for nearly half of the 16,453 approved claims it inherited from the Obama administration. About 64,000 remaining applications for relief, some three years old, are still under review.

Consumer attorney Toby Merrill said the tedious process of approving individual claims is exactly why the Obama administration included automatic loan discharges for groups of defrauded students.

[New federal rules could make it easier to have student loans forgiven]

For-profit colleges contend that the Obama administrations initiatives were designed to cripple their schools. DeVos has voiced sympathy with these complaints, calling the gainful-employment rule overly burdensome and confusing for schools.

But advocates of the rule say it protects students from shoddy programs and high loan-default rates. Ninety-eight percent of the programs that failed to meet the standards outlined in the rule are offered by for-profit colleges.

Rewriting the gainful-employment and borrower-defense rules is part of a broader effort at the department to reduce regulation.

DeVos said last month that a regulatory reform task force is scrutinizing over 150 rules and more than 1,700 pieces of policy guidance. Many could be targeted for repeal or modification.

If you had to summarize the actions that weve seen so far from the Department of Education, its an effort to reduce the federal footprint, said Terry W. Hartle, senior vice president of the American Council on Education.

The council, which represents college and university presidents, had been skeptical during the Obama administration of what it viewed as a trend toward federal micromanagement ofschools.

The task force is co-chaired by Robert S. Eitel, a former attorney at for-profit college operator Bridgepoint Education, who is now senior counsel to DeVos. Critics say the task force is failing to account for the views of students.

At no point are they asking for the input of student loan borrowers or people enrolled in college, said Alexis Goldstein, senior policy analyst at the progressive Americans for Financial Reform. The common theme here is enriching a certain number of private actors at the expense of protections for borrowers.

[DeVos dials back consumer protections for student loan borrowers]

Goldstein cited DeVoss withdrawal of three Obama-era memos designed to strengthen consumer protections for student loan borrowers. One required the department to consider a loan servicers record, including consumer complaints and state investigations, before awarding a contract.

It was a straightforward memo, Goldstein said. Getting rid of it just paves the way for student loan companies that have committed abuses against borrowers to continue on.

Department spokeswoman Hill said the directives contained shifting deadlines, changing requirements and even regulations that contradicted themselves. She said the department retained all of the meaningful borrower protections in its amended service contract.

[Betsy DeVos hits hard reset on student loan servicing contracts]

But the revised contract stripped out a requirement that the company have specialists on hand to aid people in delinquency, a feature meant to stem loandefaults.

DeVos frames the changes she has made as necessary reforms to complex policies. Not only does she want to recast Obama-era regulations, she also has suggested that Congress should consider scrapping the Higher Education Act of 1965 and starting over.

It doesnt make a lot of sense to simply amend a 50-year-old law, DeVos said in June to the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities. Adding to a half-century patchwork will not lead to meaningful reform. Real change is needed.

There are no signs that Congress will act on that recommendation. But it seems clear that the administration is seeking to shift the federal role in higher education. Whats not clear is the end goal. For all of the measures that have been repealed, the department has been short on the specifics of replacements.

The early moves seem to be responsive to industry pet peeves, said Rohit Chopra, the former student loan ombudsman at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Its just not clear to me whats the vision.

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Trump changes higher ed with rollback of Obama-era consumer protections - Washington Post

President Trump Slams Obama, Democrats After Meeting With Russian President – SpaceCoastDaily.com

ABOVE VIDEO: President Trump on Sunday slammed former President Barack Obama and his fellow Democrats, questioning why they didnt appear to respond appropriately to signs that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election.

(FOX NEWS) President Trump on Sunday slammed former President Barack Obama and his fellow Democrats, questioning why they didnt appear to respond appropriately to signs that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election.

In a series of tweets following the weekend G-20 summit, Trump also appeared to suggest that reports about members of the U.S. intelligence community unanimously concluding that Russia meddled in the race are not accurate.

Fake News said 17 intel agencies when actually 4 (had to apologize). Why did Obama do NOTHING when he had info before election? he tweeted.

Trump, a Republican, also suggested the world leaders at the summit in Hamburg, Germany, were equally interested in why Democrats connected to the 2016 race and Obama, who was president at the time, didnt appear to respond to signs of election hacking.

Questions were asked about why the CIA & FBI had to ask the DNC 13 times for their SERVER, and were rejected, still dont have it, Trump tweeted.

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President Trump Slams Obama, Democrats After Meeting With Russian President - SpaceCoastDaily.com