New Photo - Thousands to join Bangladesh rallies, concerts one year after Hasina's ouster

Thousands to join Bangladesh rallies, concerts one year after Hasina's ouster August 5, 2025 at 6:33 AM DHAKA (Reuters) Thousands of people are expected to pour into Bangladesh's capital of Dhaka on Tuesday for the first anniversary of deadly protests that ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, to att...

- - Thousands to join Bangladesh rallies, concerts one year after Hasina's ouster

August 5, 2025 at 6:33 AM

DHAKA (Reuters) -Thousands of people are expected to pour into Bangladesh's capital of Dhaka on Tuesday for the first anniversary of deadly protests that ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, to attend rallies, concerts, and prayer sessions.

The events will culminate in a declaration touted as a roadmap for democratic reform in the political journey from an uprising sparked by economic woes and repression to rule by an interim government led by Nobel peace laureate Muhammad Yunus.

"Together, we will build a Bangladesh where tyranny will never rise again," Yunus said in a message to the nation a year after protests forced Hasina to flee to neighbouring India, as he paid tribute to those who sacrificed their lives.

A peaceful, fair, and transparent election could be held early next year, Yunus said, pledging a return to full democratic rule at a time of mounting pressure for a swifter transition amid growing labour unrest.

"Fallen autocrats and their self-serving allies remain active," however, he added, urging unity to protect the gains of the uprising while his government holds reform talks with political parties and civil society.

His interim government had launched sweeping reforms, he added, while trials for those responsible for the "July killings" were progressing swiftly.

Police were on high alert throughout the capital, with armoured vehicles patrolling the streets to deter any attempt by Hasina's banned Awami League to disrupt the day's events.

"Let this anniversary not be a day of retrospection, but a rallying cry for a brighter tomorrow," Hasina said in an open letter to the people of Bangladesh, adding that she had never resigned from her duties as prime minister.

"Bangladesh has overcome adversity before, and we will rise again, stronger, more united, and more determined to build a democracy that truly serves its people."

The July Declaration, to be announced later in the day by Yunus, will formally recognise the 2024 student-led uprising and the shift away from authoritarian rule to democratic renewal.

Despite some opposition, it is backed by major political groups, including the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), led by former premier Khaleda Zia.

Supporters see the charter as a foundation for institutional reform, critics have warned its impact could be largely symbolic in the absence of a legal framework or parliamentary consensus.

(Reporting by Dhaka bureau; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

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Thousands to join Bangladesh rallies, concerts one year after Hasina's ouster

Thousands to join Bangladesh rallies, concerts one year after Hasina's ouster August 5, 2025 at 6:33 AM DHAKA (Reu...
New Photo - Trump pressures China and India to stop buying cheap Russian oil

Trump pressures China and India to stop buying cheap Russian oil DAVID McHUGH August 5, 2025 at 6:53 AM FILE An oil tanker is moored at the Sheskharis complex, part of Chernomortransneft JSC, a subsidiary of Transneft PJSC, in Novorossiysk, Russia, Tuesday, Oct.

- - Trump pressures China and India to stop buying cheap Russian oil

DAVID McHUGH August 5, 2025 at 6:53 AM

FILE - An oil tanker is moored at the Sheskharis complex, part of Chernomortransneft JSC, a subsidiary of Transneft PJSC, in Novorossiysk, Russia, Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2022, one of the largest facilities for oil and petroleum products in southern Russia. (AP Photo, File)

U.S. President Donald Trump is pushing China and India to stop buying oil from Russia and helping fund the Kremlin's war against Ukraine.

Trump is raising the issue as he seeks to press Russian President Vladimir Putin to agree to a ceasefire.

But cheap Russian oil benefits refiners in those countries as well as meeting their needs for energy, and they're not showing any inclination to halt the practice.

Three countries are big buyers of Russian oil

China, India and Turkey are the biggest recipients of oil that used to go to the European Union. The EU's decision to boycott most Russian seaborne oil from January 2023 led to a massive shift in crude flows from Europe to Asia.

Since then China has been the No. 1 overall purchaser of Russian energy since the EU boycott, with some $219.5 billion worth of Russian oil, gas and coal, followed by India with $133.4 billion and Turkey with $90.3 billion. Before the invasion, India imported relatively little Russian oil.

Hungary imports some Russian oil through a pipeline. Hungary is an EU member, but President Viktor Orban has been critical of sanctions against Russia.

The lure of cheaper oil

One big reason: It's cheap. Since Russian oil trades at a lower price than international benchmark Brent, refineries can fatten their profit margins when they turn crude into usable products such as diesel fuel.

Russia's oil earnings are substantial despite sanctions

The Kyiv School of Economics says Russia took in $12.6 billion from oil sales in June. Russia continues to earn substantial sums even as the Group of Seven leading industrialized nations has tried to limit Russia's take by imposing an oil price cap. The cap is to be enforced by requiring shipping and insurance companies to refuse to handle oil shipments above the cap. Russia has to a great extent been able to evade the cap by shipping oil on a "shadow fleet" of old vessels using insurers and trading companies located in countries that are not enforcing sanctions.

Russian oil exporters are predicted to take in $153 billion this year, according to the Kyiv institute. Fossil fuels are the single largest source of budget revenue. The imports support Russia's ruble currency and help Russia to buy goods from other countries, including weapons and parts for them.

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Trump pressures China and India to stop buying cheap Russian oil

Trump pressures China and India to stop buying cheap Russian oil DAVID McHUGH August 5, 2025 at 6:53 AM FILE An oil t...
New Photo - In rejecting the jobs report, Trump follows his own playbook of discrediting unfavorable data

In rejecting the jobs report, Trump follows his own playbook of discrediting unfavorable data JOSH BOAKAugust 5, 2025 at 12:02 PM President Donald Trump speaks with reporters before boarding Air Force One at Lehigh Valley International Airport, Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025, in Allentown, Pa.

- - In rejecting the jobs report, Trump follows his own playbook of discrediting unfavorable data

JOSH BOAKAugust 5, 2025 at 12:02 PM

President Donald Trump speaks with reporters before boarding Air Force One at Lehigh Valley International Airport, Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025, in Allentown, Pa. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

WASHINGTON (AP) — When the coronavirus surged during President Donald Trump's first term, he called for a simple fix: Limit the amount of testing so the deadly outbreak looked less severe. When he lost the 2020 election, he had a ready-made reason: The vote count was fraudulent.

And on Friday, when the July jobs report revisions showed a distressed economy, Donald Trump had an answer: He fired the official in charge of the data and called the report of a sharp slowdown in hiring "phony."

Trump has a go-to playbook if the numbers reveal uncomfortable realities, and that's to discredit or conceal the figures and to attack the messenger — all of which can hurt the president's efforts to convince the world that America is getting stronger.

"Our democratic system and the strength of our private economy depend on the honest flow of information about our economy, our government and our society," said Douglas Elmendorf, a Harvard University professor who was formerly director of the Congressional Budget Office. "The Trump administration is trying to suppress honest analysis."

The president's strategy carries significant risks for his own administration and a broader economy that depends on politics-free data. His denouncements threaten to lower trust in government and erode public accountability, and any manipulation of federal data could result in policy choices made on faulty numbers, causing larger problems for both the president and the country.

The White House disputes any claims that Trump wants to hide numbers that undermine his preferred narratives. It emphasized that Goldman Sachs found that the two-month revisions on the jobs report were the largest since 1968, outside of a recession, and that should be a source of concern regarding the integrity of the data. Trump's aides say their fundamental focus is ensuring that any data gives an accurate view of reality.

Not the first time Trump has sought to play with numbers

Trump has a long history of dismissing data when it reflects poorly on him and extolling or even fabricating more favorable numbers, a pattern that includes his net worth, his family business, election results and government figures:

— Judge Arthur Engoron ruled in a lawsuit brought by the state of New York that Trump and his company deceived banks, insurers and others by massively overvaluing his assets and exaggerating his net worth on paperwork used in making deals and securing loans.

— Trump has claimed that the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections were each rigged. Trump won the 2016 presidential election by clinching the Electoral College, but he lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton, a sore spot that led him to falsely claim that millions of immigrants living in the country illegally had cast ballots. He lost the 2020 election to Joe Biden but falsely claimed he had won it, despite multiple lawsuits failing to prove his case.

— In 2019, as Hurricane Dorian neared the East Coast, Trump warned Alabama that the storm was coming its way. Forecasters pushed back, saying Alabama was not at risk. Trump later displayed a map in the Oval Office that had been altered with a black Sharpie — his signature pen — to include Alabama in the potential path of the storm.

— Trump's administration has stopped posting reports on climate change, canceled studies on vaccine access and removed data on gender identity from government sites.

— As pandemic deaths mounted, Trump suggested that there should be less testing. "When you do testing to that extent, you're going to find more people," Trump said at a June 2020 rally in Oklahoma. "You're going to find more cases. So I said to my people, 'Slow the testing down, please.'"

While Trump's actions have drawn outcry from economists, scientists and public interest groups, Elmendorf noted that Trump's actions regarding economic data could be tempered by Congress, which could put limits on Trump by whom he chooses to lead federal agencies, for example.

"Outside observers can only do so much," Elmendorf said. "The power to push back against the president rests with the Congress. They have not exercised that power, but they could."

White House says having its own people in place will make data 'more reliable'

Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, took aim at the size of the downward revisions in the jobs report (a combined 258,000 reduction in May and June) to suggest that the report had credibility issues. He said Trump is focused on getting dependable numbers, despite the president linking the issue to politics by claiming the revisions were meant to make Republicans look bad.

"The president wants his own people there so that when we see the numbers, they're more transparent and more reliable," Hassett said Sunday on NBC News.

Jed Kolko, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who oversaw the Census Bureau and Bureau of Economic Analysis during the Biden administration, stressed that revisions to the jobs data are standard. That's because the numbers are published monthly, but not all surveys used are returned quickly enough to be in the initial publishing of the jobs report.

"Revisions solve the tension between timeliness and accuracy," Kolko said. "We want timely data because policymakers and businesses and investors need to make decisions with the best data that's available, but we also want accuracy."

Kolko stressed the importance in ensuring that federal statistics are trustworthy not just for government policymakers but for the companies trying to gauge the overall direction of the economy when making hiring and investment choices.

"Businesses are less likely to make investments if they can't trust data about how the economy is doing," he said.

Not every part of the jobs report was deemed suspect by the Trump administration.

Before Trump ordered the firing of the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner, Erika McEntarfer, the White House rapid response social media account reposted a statement by Vice President JD Vance noting that native-born citizens were getting jobs and immigrants were not, drawing from data in the household tables in the jobs report.

Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer also trumpeted the findings on native-born citizens, noting on Fox Business Network's "Varney & Co." that they are accounting "for all of the job growth, and that's key."

During his first run for the presidency, Trump criticized the economic data as being fake only to fully embrace the positive numbers shortly after he first entered the White House in 2017.

White House says transparency is a value

The challenge of reliable data goes beyond economic figures to basic information on climate change and scientific research.

In July, taxpayer-funded reports on the problems climate change is creating for America and its population disappeared from government websites. The White House initially said NASA would post the reports in compliance with a 1990 law, but the agency later said it would not because any legal obligations were already met by having reports submitted to Congress.

The White House maintains that it has operated with complete openness, posting a picture of Trump on Monday on social media with the caption, "The Most Transparent President in History."

In the picture, Trump had his back to the camera and was covered in shadows, visibly blocking out most of the light in front of him.

___

writer Michelle Price in Washington contributed to this report.

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In rejecting the jobs report, Trump follows his own playbook of discrediting unfavorable data JOSH BOAKAugust 5, 2025...
New Photo - Tennessee readies for execution of man with working implanted defibrillator

Tennessee readies for execution of man with working implanted defibrillator JONATHAN MATTISEAugust 5, 2025 at 12:05 PM FILE This undated booking photo provided by the Tennessee Department of Corrections shows Byron Black. (Tennessee Department of Corrections via AP, File) () NASHVILLE, Tenn.

- - Tennessee readies for execution of man with working implanted defibrillator

JONATHAN MATTISEAugust 5, 2025 at 12:05 PM

FILE - This undated booking photo provided by the Tennessee Department of Corrections shows Byron Black. (Tennessee Department of Corrections via AP, File) ()

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Tennessee is gearing up for an execution on Tuesday that experts say would likely mark the first time a man has been put to death with a working defibrillator in his chest.

Gov. Bill Lee declined Monday to grant a reprieve, clearing the way for Byron Black's execution after a legal battle and ongoing uncertainty about whether the implantable cardioverter-defibrillator will shock his heart when the lethal drug takes effect.

The nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center said it's unaware of any other cases in which a person on death row made similar claims to Black's about defibrillators or pacemakers. Black's attorneys said they haven't found a comparable case, either.

Lee said the courts have "universally determined that it is lawful to carry out the jury's sentence of execution given to Mr. Black for the heinous murders of Angela Clay and her daughters Lakeisha, age 6, and Latoya, age 9."

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected Black's appeals. The execution would be Tennessee's second since May, after a pause for five years, first because of COVID-19 and then because of missteps by state corrections officials.

Twenty-seven men have died by court-ordered execution so far this year in the U.S., and nine other people are scheduled to be put to death in seven states during the remainder of 2025. The number of executions this year exceeds the 25 carried out last year and in 2018. It is the highest total since 2015, when 28 people were put to death.

Black's condition

Black, 69, is in a wheelchair, and he has dementia, brain damage, kidney failure, congestive heart failure and other conditions, his attorneys have said.

The implantable cardioverter-defibrillator he has is a small, battery-powered electronic device that is surgically implanted in the chest. It serves as a pacemaker and an emergency defibrillator. Black's attorneys say in order to be sure it's off, a doctor must place a programming device over the implant site, sending it a deactivation command, with no surgery required.

In mid-July, a trial court judge agreed with Black's attorneys that officials must have his device deactivated to avert the risk that it could cause unnecessary pain and prolong the execution. But the state Supreme Court intervened July 31 to overturn that decision, saying the other judge lacked the authority to order the change.

The state has disputed that the lethal injection would cause Black's defibrillator to shock him. Even if shocks were triggered, Black wouldn't feel them, the state said.

Black's attorneys have countered that even if the lethal drug being used, pentobarbital, renders someone unresponsive, they aren't necessarily unaware or unable to feel pain.

Kelley Henry, Black's attorney, said the execution could become a "grotesque spectacle."

The legal case also spurred a reminder that most medical professionals consider participation in executions a violation of health care ethics.

Black's case

Black was convicted in the 1988 shooting deaths of his girlfriend Angela Clay, 29, and her two daughters. Prosecutors said he was in a jealous rage when he shot the three at their home. At the time, Black was on work-release while serving time for shooting Clay's estranged husband.

Linette Bell, whose sister and two nieces were killed, recently told WKRN-TV: "He didn't have mercy on them, so why should we have mercy on him?"

Intellectual disability claim

In recent years, Black's legal team has unsuccessfully tried to get a new hearing over whether he is intellectually disabled and ineligible for the death penalty under U.S. Supreme Court precedent.

His attorneys have said that if they had delayed a prior attempt to seek his intellectual disability claim, he would have been spared under a 2021 state law.

Nashville District Attorney Glenn Funk contended in 2022 that Black is intellectually disabled and deserved a hearing under that 2021 law, but the judge denied it. That is because the 2021 law denies a hearing to people on death row who have already filed a similar request and a court has ruled on it "on the merits."

In Funk's attempt, he focused on input from an expert for the state in 2004 who determined back then that Black didn't meet the criteria for what was then called "mental retardation." But she concluded that Black met the new law's criteria for a diagnosis of intellectual disability.

Black also sought a determination by the courts that he is incompetent to be executed.

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Tennessee readies for execution of man with working implanted defibrillator

Tennessee readies for execution of man with working implanted defibrillator JONATHAN MATTISEAugust 5, 2025 at 12:05 PM...
New Photo - US condemns Brazil Supreme Court order for house arrest for ex-President Jair Bolsonaro

US condemns Brazil Supreme Court order for house arrest for exPresident Jair Bolsonaro Julia Vargas Jones, Michael Rios, Duarte Mendonca, CNNAugust 5, 2025 at 5:09 AM Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro at the Brazilian Supreme Court in Brasilia on June 9.

- - US condemns Brazil Supreme Court order for house arrest for ex-President Jair Bolsonaro

Julia Vargas Jones, Michael Rios, Duarte Mendonca, CNNAugust 5, 2025 at 5:09 AM

Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro at the Brazilian Supreme Court in Brasilia on June 9. - Evaristo Sa/AFP/Getty Images

The US State Department has condemned a Brazilian Supreme Court order for the house arrest of former President Jair Bolsonaro, who is on trial over an alleged plot to overturn the results of the 2022 presidential election.

Justice Alexandre de Moraes issued the order Monday, saying Bolsonaro had failed to comply with restrictions previously imposed on him by the court, including use of social media and cell phones.

The court decision comes at a time of tense relations between Washington and Brasilia, with the case against right-wing populist Bolsonaro being seized on by US President Donald Trump as a threat in trade negotiations.

On Monday, the US State Department's Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs accused Justice Moraes of using "Brazil's institutions to silence opposition and threaten democracy," in a post on X.

"Putting even more restrictions on Jair Bolsonaro's ability to defend himself in public is not a public service. Let Bolsonaro speak!," said the post.

"The United States condemns Moraes' order imposing house arrest on Bolsonaro and will hold accountable all those aiding and abetting sanctioned conduct," it added.

The court order said Bolsonaro recorded speeches to be posted on other users' social media accounts in which his ankle monitor is visible, which Moraes said defied an order prohibiting "exploitation of interviews or public or private speeches posted on third parties' social media."

Bolsonaro will serve house arrest at his residence and will not be allowed to have visitors, except for his attorneys and people authorized by the court. The former president is also prohibited from using a cell phone, directly or through third parties.

Bolsonaro's eldest son Senator Flavio Bolsonaro also criticized the court's decision, saying on CNN Brasil that his father had never defied a court order.

"We are officially in a dictatorship. This is a sad page in the history of Brazil," he said.

In February, Jair Bolsonaro was charged in connection with an alleged coup plot to overturn the results of the 2022 election and keep his opponent, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, from taking power. Part of the coup plot, prosecutors allege, involved a plan to potentially assassinate Lula, his vice president and a minister of the Supreme Court.

Bolsonaro has denied wrongdoing.

Trump, an ally of Bolsonaro, has criticized the trial against the former Brazilian president, calling it "politically motivated," something authorities in Brazil have rejected. Last week, he signed executive actions imposing a 50% tariff on Brazil, after threatening to do so if the country did not end the trial against Bolsonaro.

The US has also sanctioned Justice Moraes for what it considers "serious human rights violations," and announced visa restrictions against him and other court officials over Bolsonaro's trial.

Bolsonaro's supporters and some on Brazil's right have welcomed Trump's proactive interest in the case. But the current administration in Brasilia, and many others in Latin American nation, see it as the US directly meddling in its affairs.

President Lula last week slammed the US for imposing the tariff on Brazilian exports and for sanctioning the Supreme Court justice. He accused the American government of interfering in Brazil's justice system, a move he called "unacceptable."

Stefano Pozzebon contributed to this report.

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US condemns Brazil Supreme Court order for house arrest for ex-President Jair Bolsonaro

US condemns Brazil Supreme Court order for house arrest for exPresident Jair Bolsonaro Julia Vargas Jones, Michael Rio...
New Photo - Australia's internet network signs Amazon satellite service

Australia's internet network signs Amazon satellite service Byron KayeAugust 5, 2025 at 11:54 AM By Byron Kaye SYDNEY (Reuters) The Australian governmentowned internet network hired Amazon's untested startup satellite service to provide connectivity to people who cannot access its terrestrial networ...

- - Australia's internet network signs Amazon satellite service

Byron KayeAugust 5, 2025 at 11:54 AM

By Byron Kaye

SYDNEY (Reuters) -The Australian government-owned internet network hired Amazon's untested startup satellite service to provide connectivity to people who cannot access its terrestrial network rather than Elon Musk's Starlink.

From next year, low-Earth orbit satellites owned by Amazon's Project Kuiper will start replacing two Australian government-owned satellites due for decommissioning in 2032, NBN Co and Amazon said in a joint statement on Tuesday.

The deal, for which financial terms were not disclosed, is designed to give high-speed internet to some 300,000 homes and businesses that NBN's terrestrial network does not reach. The thousands of low-Earth orbit satellites are connected to each other through optical links and communicate with antennas and other connection points on the ground.

The deal represents a missed opportunity for Starlink, by far the world's biggest provider of such network services and which already has more than 250,000 customers in Australia, according to industry data. Australia's two biggest telecoms providers sell Starlink residential connection dishes and some government entities, including the Australian Electoral Commission, also have contracts with the company.

Starlink, a unit of Musk's SpaceX rocket company, now has 8,000 fast-orbiting satellites since it began launching them in 2019, while Amazon's service has just 78 since its first launch in April. NBN and Amazon said Project Kuiper would ultimately have more than 3,200.

NBN said the decision followed a rigorous procurement process, but did not say why it had chosen the Amazon service.

Starlink was not immediately available for comment.

"It is true that Amazon Kuiper has not launched services yet in Australia or globally, but they are reportedly pumping in about $15 billion into that programme," said Gavin Williams, chief development officer for regional and remote services at NBN.

"We have every confidence that we've got a partner in Kuiper that will do what they say they're going to do," he added in an interview.

Asked if Musk's ownership of Starlink played a part in the decision, Williams said only that NBN supplied critical infrastructure with regulatory and legal obligations and "technical, operational, and commercial imperatives that fall into that consideration were contemplated and ventilated through the procurement process."

(Reporting by Byron Kaye and Alasdair Pal; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

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Australia's internet network signs Amazon satellite service

Australia's internet network signs Amazon satellite service Byron KayeAugust 5, 2025 at 11:54 AM By Byron Kaye SYD...
New Photo - Is your student loan payment increasing? What to know about SAVE plan updates

Is your student loan payment increasing? What to know about SAVE plan updates Kathryn Palmer, USA TODAY August 4, 2025 at 10:17 PM Millions of student loan borrowers who were enrolled in a Bidenera repayment plan will soon see their monthly payments increase after the current administration restarte...

- - Is your student loan payment increasing? What to know about SAVE plan updates

Kathryn Palmer, USA TODAY August 4, 2025 at 10:17 PM

Millions of student loan borrowers who were enrolled in a Biden-era repayment plan will soon see their monthly payments increase after the current administration restarted interest accrual Aug. 1.

Nearly 8 million borrowers on the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan are now collecting interest on their loans for the first time since former President Joe Biden placed the group in forbearance in July 2024, pausing both monthly payments and interest accrual.

"Borrowers in the SAVE Plan will see their loan balances grow when interest starts accruing on August 1," the Department of Education said in its July 9 announcement of the changes. "When the SAVE Plan forbearance ends, borrowers will be responsible for making monthly payments that include any accrued interest as well as their principal amounts."

SAVE plan borrowers will begin seeing interest accrue on their loans after more than a year of relief, but they remain in general forbearance for their minimum monthly payments. However, payments on interest alone could cost the typical borrower hundreds of dollars per month, according to a recent analysis from the Student Borrower Protection Center, a debt-focused advocacy group.

More: What will student loans look like now that Trump's spending bill is signed?

The Department said the move is part of an effort to comply with an injunction issued in April to implement a court order striking down SAVE, however, the rulings they cited do not specifically call the interest-free forbearance illegal.

Here's what to know:

What is the SAVE plan?

That program, launched in 2023 by the Biden administration, was designed to provide more generous terms than prior income-based repayment plans, with monthly payments dropping to as low as $0 for some borrowers.

It also provided debt forgiveness for some smaller loans in as few as 10 years, compared to the 20- or 25-year timeline under earlier rules. But the program was quickly challenged in court, caught up in a string of rulings over the administration's student debt relief plan. In 2024, two courts issued injunctions against the SAVE plan, effectively blocking it, leading the Biden administration to place SAVE plan borrowers into an interest-free forbearance as its legal fights continued.

Parade participants protesting against high student loan burdens prepare to take part in the annual Independence Day parade in Ashland, Oregon on July 4, 2015.

Like several other student loan programs, the SAVE plan has come under fire from President Donald Trump's Department of Education as it began to aggressively overhaul the federal student loan system and institute aggressive collection policies.

The Department said it began direct outreach to the millions of SAVE plan borrowers in early July about the resumption of interest charges, including instructions on how to move to what it calls a "legal repayment plan."

How much will payments increase?

For the typical borrower on the plan, the resumption of interest charges could cost them about $300 per month, according to a July analysis from the debt-focused advocacy group Student Borrower Protection Center. That amounts to more than $3,500 in interest costs annually.

The center said it estimates more than 40% of borrowers in the SAVE plan make less than 225% of the federal poverty line, which it calculated to be $35,213 per year for single borrowers and up to $72,338 for borrowers heading a household of four.

Borrowers can check how the resumption of interest on their loans will impact their payments by going to the loan simulator on the Federal Student Aid website.

What is the Repayment Assistance Plan?

Education Secretary Linda McMahon urged SAVE borrowers to transition quickly to alternate repayment plans.

"For years, the Biden administration used so-called 'loan forgiveness' promises to win votes, but federal courts repeatedly ruled that those actions were unlawful," she said in a statement on July 9. "Congress designed these programs to ensure that borrowers repay their loans, yet the Biden administration tried to illegally force taxpayers to foot the bill instead."

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Secretary of Education Linda McMahon during an executive order signing ceremony in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on July 31, 2025, in Washington, DC.

McMahon said the department urges all borrowers in the SAVE plan to transition to what she calls "legally compliant" repayment plans, pointing to the administration's proposed Repayment Assistance Plan, RAP, slated to replace the existing Income-Based Repayment Plan in 2026.

SAVE based monthly payments, which could be as low as $0, on discretionary income. In comparison, RAP bases payments on gross income and requires all borrowers, even those who report no income, to make minimum monthly payments of at least $10.

The new plan was part of a series of student loan changes included in Trump's massive tax and spending bill, signed into law on July 4. Most of the overhauls take effect July 1, 2026, and include new limits on the amount that students and their families can borrow and new eligibility criteria for Pell Grants, which help low-income undergraduate students.

This story was to clarify a reference to SAVE plan borrowers' forbearance status.

Contributing: Reuters; Zachary Schermele, USA TODAY.

Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at [email protected] and on X @KathrynPlmr.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Student loan interest resumes for millions of SAVE plan borrowers

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Is your student loan payment increasing? What to know about SAVE plan updates

Is your student loan payment increasing? What to know about SAVE plan updates Kathryn Palmer, USA TODAY August 4, 2025...

 

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