Rep Jim Jordan raked the chief divider, Biden, over hot coals this week for his inciteful and divisive comments about conservatives. Biden called former President Donald Trump and the “MAGA Republican” philosophy “semi-fascism” during a Democratic fundraiser Thursday in Maryland.
“This is ridiculous,” the representative began. “I was there on inauguration day when during his speech when he said that we need to unify the country and we all agreed with that, frankly, and then what did he do? Two hours after that, he went to the Oval Office and signed 21 executive orders that divided the country, and here he goes again.”
“The disdain they have for conservatives, for Republicans, for President Trump supporters is wrong, and again, the country understands that,” he concluded.
The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget settled on a central estimate of approximately $500 billion, according to a Thursday report.
Biden announced up to $20,000 in federal student loan forgiveness on Wednesday. Students who attended college using federal Pell Grants qualify for the $20,000, but those who did not use the program qualify for $10,000 in forgiveness. The handout only applies to borrowers making less than $125,000 per year.
Critics have argued Biden’s program will contribute to already record-high levels of inflation in the U.S. while most families fear the rise in inflation the bailout will cause.
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While American families are projected to spend over $5,000 more this year because of the president’s inflation crisis, Biden is busy issuing executive orders that will add hundreds of billions to the taxpayer’s tab and enact sweeping policies that expand Washington command and control over Americans’ lives — without Congress ever authorizing those actions or appropriating that spending. All the while, the president is trying to perpetuate a myth that he is reducing the deficit.
People should be mad. Hell, they should be furious. Biden’s plan is unfair to families who are struggling, to people who paid their debt and to families who didn’t go to college because they couldn’t afford it.