A federal judge will let expire a temporary restraining order against the Biden administration's sweeping new student loan forgiveness plan.
Read Also
- At least 78 people killed after boat capsizes in DRC
- Form, teams, head-to-head: India vs New Zealand – Women’s T20 World Cup
- Is Hezbollah still able to fight Israel after its leadership has weakened?
- Suspect wanted for 1st-degree murder, 3 others charged in 2023 central Edmonton homicide
- Quebec bill looks to protect people from having intimate images shared without consent
- What to Know About the Marburg Virus Disease Outbreak
- Trump election conspiracist Tina Peters sentenced to 9 years in prison by Colorado judge
- NFL star Rashee Rice’s mom accused of stealing Chapell Roan package from neighbor’s doorstep
- The S.S. United States May Soon Find New Life on the Florida Seafloor
- Countries evacuate citizens from Lebanon
Latest CNBC
- Trump election conspiracist Tina Peters sentenced to 9 years in prison by Colorado judge
- Here's everything to expect when the September jobs report is released Friday
- U.S. crude oil jumps as Biden comments on possible Israel retaliation on Iran
- OpenAI gets $4 billion revolving credit line, giving it more than $10 billion in liquidity
- European markets close 1% lower as investors focus on Middle East escalation
- Biden administration can move forward with student loan forgiveness, federal judge rules
- CNBC's Inside India newsletter: The 'sticky' outsourcing firms on the rise
- OpenAI gets $4 billion revolving credit line, giving it more than $10 billion in liquidity
- Digital bank Revolut slams Meta over approach to scams, says tech giant should compensate victims
- Oil market faces a rude awakening if Iran’s energy infrastructure is targeted, analysts say