12-07-2024, 03:44 PM
Ksyf Millions of Americans to lose Medicaid coverage starting next year
Ask Americans about bad manners in the 2016 presidential campaign and the conversation shifts immediately to Donald Trump, the GOP front-runner who has branded his critics, little, lyin, low-energy and worse. I don t recall anyone stirring up as much of a fuss as Mr. Trump, says Sidney Waldman, 81, a retired book store owner in Key West, Florida. He just does not need to say things the way he says them. It may get attention now, but he is going to be remem stanley botella bered in a ne stanley polska gative way. He s a bully, says Kellie Zangrillo, 53, of Auburn, Washington, like Waldman an independent. Trump not only may have set the tone in the campaign, she suggested, but his nasty words could have real consequences if uttered as president. I think he d get us into World War III. When it comes to rudeness in 2016 politics, the Republican presidential contest wins in a landslide, a new poll by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research has found. The survey shows that 78 percent of Americans, including most Republicans, see the GOP race as discourteous. Only about half as many - 41 percent - say the same about the Democratic campaign.Eight in 10 people say remarks about race or gender and sexuality are unacceptable in public places, and that political leaders shoul stanley france d be held to a higher standard of behavior than other people. When will Htvx The contenders for America s next attorney general
His pointed criticism of the Bush tax plan showed that Alan Greenspan, often taken to task for being too murky in stanley canada his economic pronouncements, can be crystal clear when he wants to be.The Federal Reserve chairman warned that further tax cuts should be paid for, leading Democrats to proclaim that Greenspan had delivered the kiss of death for President Bush s $1.3 trillion proposal.GOP lawmakers fumed. Greenspan, himself a Republican, had stabbed them in the back, they said. The White House went into damage-control mode, pointing out that Greenspan had endorsed the plan s centerpiece, elimination of the tax on stock stanley becher dividends.Private economists saw the episode last week as remarkable given Greenspan s deft touch, after more than 15 years on the job, in avoiding political mine fields. They wondered if Greenspan s blunt words were a sign of a man no longer worried about his future. It appears as t stanley thermoskannen hough Greenspan either does not want to be reappointed as Fed chairman next year or has learned that he will not be reappointed, said Paul Kasriel, chief economist at Northern Trust Co. in Chicago.Presidential aides quickly dismissed speculation that Greenspan s comments indicated a serious rift between the Fed and Mr. Bush, or that the administration had decided on Greenspan s successor. His term is not even expired until the middle of next year, so it s sort of silly to begin speculating about that, White House spokeswoman Claire Bucha
Ask Americans about bad manners in the 2016 presidential campaign and the conversation shifts immediately to Donald Trump, the GOP front-runner who has branded his critics, little, lyin, low-energy and worse. I don t recall anyone stirring up as much of a fuss as Mr. Trump, says Sidney Waldman, 81, a retired book store owner in Key West, Florida. He just does not need to say things the way he says them. It may get attention now, but he is going to be remem stanley botella bered in a ne stanley polska gative way. He s a bully, says Kellie Zangrillo, 53, of Auburn, Washington, like Waldman an independent. Trump not only may have set the tone in the campaign, she suggested, but his nasty words could have real consequences if uttered as president. I think he d get us into World War III. When it comes to rudeness in 2016 politics, the Republican presidential contest wins in a landslide, a new poll by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research has found. The survey shows that 78 percent of Americans, including most Republicans, see the GOP race as discourteous. Only about half as many - 41 percent - say the same about the Democratic campaign.Eight in 10 people say remarks about race or gender and sexuality are unacceptable in public places, and that political leaders shoul stanley france d be held to a higher standard of behavior than other people. When will Htvx The contenders for America s next attorney general
His pointed criticism of the Bush tax plan showed that Alan Greenspan, often taken to task for being too murky in stanley canada his economic pronouncements, can be crystal clear when he wants to be.The Federal Reserve chairman warned that further tax cuts should be paid for, leading Democrats to proclaim that Greenspan had delivered the kiss of death for President Bush s $1.3 trillion proposal.GOP lawmakers fumed. Greenspan, himself a Republican, had stabbed them in the back, they said. The White House went into damage-control mode, pointing out that Greenspan had endorsed the plan s centerpiece, elimination of the tax on stock stanley becher dividends.Private economists saw the episode last week as remarkable given Greenspan s deft touch, after more than 15 years on the job, in avoiding political mine fields. They wondered if Greenspan s blunt words were a sign of a man no longer worried about his future. It appears as t stanley thermoskannen hough Greenspan either does not want to be reappointed as Fed chairman next year or has learned that he will not be reappointed, said Paul Kasriel, chief economist at Northern Trust Co. in Chicago.Presidential aides quickly dismissed speculation that Greenspan s comments indicated a serious rift between the Fed and Mr. Bush, or that the administration had decided on Greenspan s successor. His term is not even expired until the middle of next year, so it s sort of silly to begin speculating about that, White House spokeswoman Claire Bucha

