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Democrats hold competing ‘People’s State of the Union’ address to protest Trump

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Democrats join ‘People’s State of the Union’ rally during Trump speech

As President Donald Trump delivered his State of the Union address, at least 30 Democratic members of the Senate and House held their own “People’s State of the Union” near the U.S. Capitol.

The event started more than an hour before the president spoke.

One after another, for more than two hours, more than two dozen Democrats — who skipped the State of the Union address a few blocks away — took to the stage on the West Side of the Capitol on a cold, windy night.

Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen was one of the first speakers.

“Now we know the State of the Union. We know that it is under attack from a lawless president,” he said. “We are here because we know our country is being robbed by the most corrupt administration in American history.”

Many of the speakers brought guests to tell their personal stories. Van Hollen introduced Jenna Norton, a career government researcher and National Institutes of Health whistleblower who was put on leave after exposing how DOGE-related cuts to health research actually wasted money instead of saving it.

“The Trump administration put research participants and the public health at risk when they abruptly terminated NIH studies,” he said.

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“When you halt a study, a five-year study, a $5 million study, four years in, you don’t save $1 million, you waste $4 million.”

In the crowd, many of the attendees held signs critical of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. One sign read, “No Money for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement,” and another read “Health care Not Warfare.”

The event was co-sponsored by MoveOn.org and its Executive Director Katie Bethell said the event was organized because, “We know that Donald Trump’s State of the Union will bear no resemblance to what’s actually happening in this country today.”

Also speaking was Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy, who, as he was introduced to the crowd, began an abolish ICE chant.

Murphy said he decided to skip the State of the Union because, “These are not normal times and Democrats have to stop behaving normally.”

As Murphy was speaking, a Trump supporter carrying a sign jumped over the barricades and got within a few feet of Murphy before security took him off the stage as the crowd booed.

Co-host Joy Reid, a former anchor at MSNBC, addressed the interruption: “Attention all MAGA trolls: your bulls— is not welcome here. We are here to hear the truth and to hear from impacted people.”

What to know about student loan repayment plans and collections

NEW YORK (AP) — It's been a confusing time for people with student loans. Collections restarted, then were put on hold. At the same time, borrowers had to stay on top of changes to key forgiveness plans. President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” introduced new borrowing limits for graduates and raised challenges to the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program. While several changes for student loan borrowers will take effect this summer, other key questions remain unresolved. More than 5 million Americans were in default on their federal student loans as of September, according to the Education Department. Millions are behind on loan payments and at risk of default this year. Borrowers "genuinely struggle to afford their loans and then to hear that the administration is making it more expensive and taking away some of the tools and resources that help folks afford their loans is really, it’s panic-inducing,” said Winston Berkman-Breen, legal director at Protect Borrowers.
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