Aenean vitae fringilla metus, sed pellentesque nisl. Morbi quis mi tincidunt, consequat risus et, dapibus magna. In lacinia dictum nunc, non dignissim quam.


Aenean vitae fringilla metus, sed pellentesque nisl. Morbi quis mi tincidunt, consequat risus et, dapibus magna. In lacinia dictum nunc, non dignissim quam.
First and foremost, I want to thank you for the support you gave me during my presidential campaign. It not only allowed us to run the strongest progressive presidential campaign in modern history, but it revolutionized the way campaigns in this country are funded. It showed the world that you could reject corporate PACs and billionaire fundraising events, rely on small individual contributions, and raise the funds you need to run a serious campaign. This is a lesson that more and more candidates are learning, and it is no small accomplishment.
This week, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in the Biden administration’s case to reinstate the President’s plan to cancel billions of dollars in student debt.
A victory would result in more than 40 million Americans seeing up to $20,000 in student loans forgiven, and would wipe student debt entirely for 20 million people across the country.
Our movement has fought long and hard for this for years, and with these Supreme Court hearings, we’re once again at a critical fork in the road.
Will we as a society forgive this debt and allow millions of people to learn, prosper, and grow? Or will we continue to punish millions with insurmountable debt for the crime of pursuing an education?
This week, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in the Biden administration’s case to reinstate the President’s plan to cancel billions of dollars in student debt.
A victory would result in more than 40 million Americans seeing up to $20,000 in student loans forgiven, and would wipe student debt entirely for 20 million people across the country.
Our movement has fought long and hard for this for years, and with these Supreme Court hearings, we’re once again at a critical fork in the road.
Will we as a society forgive this debt and allow millions of people to learn, prosper, and grow? Or will we continue to punish millions with insurmountable debt for the crime of pursuing an education?