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nneh Schieffer: Hagel s nomination may be in trouble
« le: Décembre 03, 2024, 11:54:17 am »
Wnxp This week on  Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,  August 21, 2022: Cardona, Turner, Birx, Laufman, Klieman, O Keefe, Walter, Costa
 More than 7 months after the George Washington Bridge scandal snarled his administration, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie s approval ratings have yet to recover, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll.Forty-nine percent of voters said they approve of Christie s job performance in the new survey, while 47 percent said they disapprove. The results split predictably along party lines: 71 percent of Democrats disapprove, while 86 percent of Republicans approve. Independent voters split about evenly.The results represent quite a fall from grace for Christie, a Republican whose approval ratings in July 2013 before the scandal broke hovered near 70 percent. He won reelection later that year by a 60 to 38 percent  stanley tumbler margin.                                         People used to talk about Gov. Christopher Christie s appeal to independent voters, but many of t stanley thermos hose voters now have second thoughts,  explained Maurice Carroll, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll.  Bridgegate has faded from the headlines, but Gov. Christie still hasn t recovered.                                                                                                         Chris Christie says bridge scandal prompted  soul-searching           01:24                                                                      In January, it was revealed that several of Christie s aides engineered a traffic jam on access lanes to th stanley cup e busy George Washington Bridge in September 2013 to punish a local Democr Kolc Too early for 2016  Too bad
 Former President Clinton came to sell his book on  Late Show with David Letterman  Tuesday night but much of his talk was about the 2004 presidential race.Still, he managed to do a little selling mdash; putting in a few good words for Sen. John Kerry, the newly anointed Democratic presidential candidate. Of all the people I dealt with in Congress,  Mr. Clinton said in part,  he cared the most about trying to find programs that would keep young, inner-city minority kids out of trouble and out of jail and in school.                 stanley trinkflaschen                          There were no votes in this for John Kerry ... He just did it  cause he thought it was right. I think it s quite a good quality in a politician to care about something that will have a big impact on our future that ha stanley thermobecher s no benefit to him today,  he added.        When asked whether the economy or the war in Iraq would be the d garrafinhas stanley eciding issue in the presidential election, Mr. Clinton replied,  I think the security question is a threshold question. I believe if the voters can get it fixed in their mind that they can trust Sen. Kerry to fight the war against terror and keep us safe at home, that it s more likely than not he will win, because after 9/11 the Bush administration went  way to the right on domestic policy. Mr. Clinton noted that the assault weapons ban expires Sept. 13, but while Mr. Bush said he d sign it, he s  made no effort  to get Republicans on Capitol Hill to renew it.  We could legalize deadly assault weapons and