Huffington Post
A tenuous agreement on a bailout plan for Wall Street that had been reached Thursday morning was threatening to fall apart by the time evening had arrived. At fault, it became clear, was a divided Republican Party within the House of Representatives, whose leadership begrudgingly favored the $700 billion bailout but whose a (Read More)
: I'm really not sure what his strategy is here. Anyone? Is he playing the chance that common folk will be against the bailout so he'll side with the people? vs. what's right for the economy? this from the guy who said he'd rather lose the election than lose the war?
: Before McCain arrived, House Republicans hadn't been satisfied with the results. Throwing this on McCain's back is revisionist history of the worst kind from a website with already questionable authority.
Representative Eric Cantor, a member of the Republican leadership, said most House members of his party don't back it.
"We have not seen a way to getting majority support" from Republicans, he said.
So McCain is, at worst, simply telling it as it is. The House Republicans that agreed to the compromise were a small group whereas the larger part of his party in the House didn't like it.
Submitted by Lance:
I know that I’m about to be fired. My boss has started the paper trail. I’m being written up and “counseled” for every tiny thing. For example, I forgot to sign one form out of 30 that I complete each day and was written up for not following procedure.My question is: How do I handle this and what steps should I take to comb (Read More)
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