Auteur Sujet: ylra McCarthy invites Biden to deliver his State of the Union address on Feb. 7  (Lu 19 fois)

Morrisshot

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 9400
Xlms Can We Identify Bills that Led to Deregulation Over the Past 30 Years
 WASHINGTON  AP  鈥?President Joe Biden declared on Thursday that we have a deal, announcing a bipartisan agreement on a $953 billion infrastructure plan that would achieve his top legislative priority and validate his efforts to reach across the political aisle.Watch Biden   remarks in the player above.Biden made a surprise appearance in front of the cameras with members of a group of senators, Republicans and Democrats, after an agreement was reached at the White House. Details of the deal were scarce to start, but the pared-down plan, with $559 billion in new spending, has rare bipartisan backing and could open the door to the president   more sweeping $4 trillion proposals later on.This reminds me of the days when we used to get an awful lot done up in the United States Congress, said Biden, a former Delaware senator, putting his hand on the shoulder of a stoic-looking Republican stanley cup  Sen. Rob Portman.The president said not everyone got what they wanted and that other White House priorities would be tackled separately in a congressional budget process known as reconciliation.We ;ve struck a deal, Biden then tweeted. A group of senators 鈥?five Democrats and five Republicans 鈥?has come together and forged an infrastructure agreement that will create millions o stanley cup f American jobs.The deal was struck amid months of partisan rancor that has consumed Washington, yet Biden has insisted that something could be stanley cup  done des Dttr AP report: Parliamentarian says COVID-19 bill must lose minimum wage hike
 Something significant is happening in the desert in Egypt as countries meet at COP27, the United Nations summit on climate change.Despite frustrating sclerosis in the negotiating halls, the pathway forward for ramping up climate finance to help low-income countries adapt to climate change and transition to clean energy is becoming clearer.I spent a large part of my career working on international finance at the World Bank and the United Nations and now advise public development and private funds and teach climate diplomacy focusing on finance. Climate finance has been one of the thorniest issues in global climate negotiations for decades, but Im seeing four promising signs of progress at COP27.Getting to net zero 鈥?without greenwashingFirst, the goal 鈥?getting the world to net zero green stanley cup house gas emissions by 2050 to stop global warming 鈥?is clearer.The last climate conference, COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland, nearly fell apart over frustration that international finance wasnt flowing to developing countries and that corporations and financial institutions were greenwashing 鈥?making claims they couldnt back up. One year on, something is stirring.READ MORE: African nations negotiate af1  funding f jordan or climate change mitigation at COP27In 2021, the financial sector arrived at COP26 in full force for the first time. Private banks, insurers and institutional investors representing US$130 trillion said they would align their investments with the goal of keeping global warming to 1.5 degrees C