装备出发黄石,请教挂机头?# PhotoGear - 摄影器材
m*a
1 楼
大家别期待太高就是了,免得之后太失望。
我感觉共和党如果控制两院,第一件事儿肯定是要干掉obamacare,而不是移民改革。
不论成功与否,有了这个深仇大恨,obama不会pass任何共和党提上来的移民法的。最
后一样是狗咬狗。
No matter what happens tonight, one issue is sure to vex President Obama and
congressional Republicans alike after the election: immigration.
Both sides have reason to take action. The president, having already long
delayed any immigration measure because of political concerns before the
election, needs to act soon if he hopes to placate the increasingly angry
Hispanics whom Democrats depend on.
Election Results Will Not Change the Politics of Immigration
Republicans, eager to avoid another pitiful showing among Hispanic voters,
hope to make some progress on immigration before the 2016 presidential race
gets started in earnest.
But even if Republicans control both the House and the Senate, they may not
be able to agree on much more than a few modest border security measures,
which will anger Hispanic voters and which Mr. Obama is likely to veto. In
fact, controlling both chambers of Congress may further expose rifts within
the Republican party on immigration.
The president is expected to offer his long-awaited executive action on at
least some form of an immigration overhaul before December, during the
congressional lame duck session.
That, of course, will only serve to further infuriate Republicans, and last
week Senators Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, John McCain of Arizona and
Marco Rubio of Florida wrote Mr. Obama a letter to “strongly discourage”
him from taking any such action.
我感觉共和党如果控制两院,第一件事儿肯定是要干掉obamacare,而不是移民改革。
不论成功与否,有了这个深仇大恨,obama不会pass任何共和党提上来的移民法的。最
后一样是狗咬狗。
No matter what happens tonight, one issue is sure to vex President Obama and
congressional Republicans alike after the election: immigration.
Both sides have reason to take action. The president, having already long
delayed any immigration measure because of political concerns before the
election, needs to act soon if he hopes to placate the increasingly angry
Hispanics whom Democrats depend on.
Election Results Will Not Change the Politics of Immigration
Republicans, eager to avoid another pitiful showing among Hispanic voters,
hope to make some progress on immigration before the 2016 presidential race
gets started in earnest.
But even if Republicans control both the House and the Senate, they may not
be able to agree on much more than a few modest border security measures,
which will anger Hispanic voters and which Mr. Obama is likely to veto. In
fact, controlling both chambers of Congress may further expose rifts within
the Republican party on immigration.
The president is expected to offer his long-awaited executive action on at
least some form of an immigration overhaul before December, during the
congressional lame duck session.
That, of course, will only serve to further infuriate Republicans, and last
week Senators Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, John McCain of Arizona and
Marco Rubio of Florida wrote Mr. Obama a letter to “strongly discourage”
him from taking any such action.