In today's Problem-Solver's Daily, states are getting redder and bluer, student loan rates are set to double and Problem Solver Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney is focusing on doable projects.
In today's Problem-Solver's Daily, states are getting redder and bluer, student loan rates are set to double and Problem Solver Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney is focusing on doable projects.
This morning the Supreme Court upheld the Affordable Care Act. The health care law could have been less contested if both sides had worked harder to find common ground on reform in the first place. Now that the Supreme Court has ruled, both sides must move forward and work together to solve America's many problems.
Defense isn't the only sector that will feel the effects of the looming sequester. These spending cuts will reach most corners of the government -- and the results could be dire if Congress can't find solutions in time.
Party leaders are pointing to November, saying that their side will win the election and when their side holds power, the solutions will be easy. The truth? Neither party will likely win enough seats in the Senate to get a filibuster-proof majority and the presidency is virtually a coin-flip at this point.
Following the Super Committee's failure to trim the federal budget last year, the nation's military is scheduled for a $500 billion hit in automatic cuts. However a group of about 30 senators is trying to find solutions.
Democrats and Republicans agree doubling the student loan rate would have a negative effect on students. Republicans want to divert money from a prevention fund created under the new health care law, while Democrats insist on eliminating a tax loophole for certain corporations. Instead of finding room in the middle, the sides have punted -- ever closer to the day when rates would actualy double.