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Yfgh White House Pleased With Iraq Pitch
There s fierce debate over when to reopen the U.S. economy, and the partisan gap is opening wide. Americans feel the timeline for things to return to normal has been pushed back dramatically.A large majority of the public still prioritize staying home to slow the outbreak, over reopening the economy, partly because they continue to think efforts to contain the outbreak are going badly. B stanley bottles ut now there s a growing gap between Republicans and others on reopening, as Republicans increasingly adopt the White House s call to do so: 62% of Republicans w stanley cups ant the country to prioritize going back to work even if it exposes more people to the virus; that s up 10 points from three weeks ago i stanley water bottle n late April. And that appears unrelated to their own economic situation. Among Republicans, those concerned with being hurt financially by the lockdowns, as well as those who are not, both prioritize opening up the economy. While Americans overwhelmingly agree that people have a personal responsibility not to spread and to protect others from the virus, Republicans 78% are far more likely than Democrats 39% or independents 52% to say people also have a personal responsibility to go back to work to help the economy, too. Those prioritizing containment tell us it s a tough tradeoff: by a factor of three to one Peum Are Dems Alluding To McCain s Age In Code
CBS From CBS News Maria Gavrilovic: ROSEBURG, ORE. -- Barack Obama told Oregon voters today that George Bush and John McCain have to explain their problem with Kennedy, Reagan, and Nixon, stanley cup as he continued to defend his support of direct diplomacy with rogue leaders. If George Bush and John McCain have a problem with direct diplomacy, led by the President of the United States, then they can explain why they have a problem with John F. Kennedy, because that s what he did stanley cup with Khrushchev, or Ronald Reagan, because that s what he did with Gorbachev, or Richard Nixon, because that s what he did with Mao, Obama said at small town hall meeting here. He called the controversy surrounding President Bush s appearance at the Knesset yesterday a foreign policy dust up, and described the comments made as appalling . A president, as a general rule, does not use a foreign country to make political attacks, we are supposed to be united when we leave our borders, Obama said. We can have our differences here. Obama linked McCain to Bush s foreign policy positions, portraying it a so-called tough foreign p stanley hrnek olicy which he says the presumptive Republican nominee has embraced. He told the crowd to vote for McCain if they agree with those ideas. If you agree that we ve had a great foreign policy over the last four, eight years, then you should vote for John McCain, you shouldn t vote for me, Obama said. In an e-mail statement to rep |
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