So the pre-election Republican position, backed by allies such as the Chamber of Commerce, to extend all of the tax cuts and postpone all of the spending cuts until
the leaders work out a deal is not likely to win over many Democrats, who seem more inclined to let the tax cuts expire and start from scratch next year, presumably making it harder for Republicans to resist.
Not exact matches
The dramatic developments overshadowed the G20 summit of world
leaders in the French resort of Cannes, where President Barack Obama implored European
leaders to swiftly
work out a eurozone plan to
deal with the continent's crisis, which threatens to push the world back into recession.
If a problem arises which is not
dealt with clearly in the Qur» an or in the Sunnah, the answer is sought in the schools of thought, the theories
worked out by «
leaders of thought» who have been careful students of the Qur» an and the Sunnah, have thought profoundly about their inner meanings and understand their general principles, and who have special knowledge of virtue and the general welfare.
Arriving at his office shortly before the Senate Republican conference meets to discuss the rent / tax cap «framework»
deal, Majority
Leader Dean Skelos says some key aspects of bill language are still being
worked out — casting blame on Democratic Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver:
Senate Minority
Leader Chuck Schumer said trying to
work out a
deal with Trump is like «negotiating with Jell - O.»
While
leaders try to
work out a
deal community gardeners will continue to stress the importance the green spaces.
«It
worked out much better for the American people,» Senate Minority
Leader Charles E. Schumer, D - N.Y., said Monday regarding the budget
deal.
«I think it brings honor to the County of Albany that I have been selected as deputy minority
leader, but it also means that I will have a great
deal of
work to do to make sure that we get
out of the $ 10 billion deficit while at the same time protecting health care and education,» Breslin told the Times Union on Monday, the first day of the Senate's 2011 session.
A source tells the paper that he's
worked out a
deal to let five veteran Assembly Democrats — Majority
Leader Joseph Morelle, Herman «Denny» Farrell, Joseph Lentol, Cathy Nolan, and Carl Heastie — run the chamber in his stead.
And with that entirely predictable performance from either side, the prime minister went back to the business of government (quibbling over the semantics of benefit reform) and the Labour
leader returned to the good
work of opposition (donning a charming little tux with a maroon metallic sheen,
dealing out the cards, and raking in the chips).
If our top state
leaders are
working things
out over a dinner at this iconic symbol of the old world, and more specifically no doubt the site of many a political backroom
deal, how are we ever going to get past the climate of «the Machine»?
New York Senator and Senate Democratic
Leader Chuck Schumer, along with House Democratic
Leader Nancy Pelosi, cut a
deal with President Trump to
work out a new federal spending plan by mid-December.
Skelos and Golden put
out the statement as Gov. Cuomo and legislative
leaders work to finalize a
deal on a new state budget.
Still, Senate Democratic
leaders on Wednesday urged Republicans to come to the bargaining table to
work out a
deal to finance the government through Sept. 30 and perhaps go beyond the immediate fiscal issues to take on larger budgetary questions about spending on entitlement programs like Medicare and an increase in the debt limit.
This internal semantic
work then needs airing
out with a live person; it is critical that the
leader be vulnerable enough to admit that she needs to stumble her way through this trial run with a trusted colleague to give the real
deal a better chance of success.
The positive parts of a school
leader's
work can become lost in the day - to - day business of putting
out brushfires —
dealing with difficult students and parents, solving staff problems and the like.
In our
work with school and district
leaders, we have found real value in using simulations to help them try
out strategies and
work on communication skills necessary to
deal with structural or institutional biases.
In «The Future of
Work Today: Insights From the New World of
Work,» starting November 5, at 9:00 a.m., Mattison, founder and chief movement officer of FutureSight Labs, points
out how fast the business world is shifting today and the challenges
leaders will face over the next few years — not the least of which are those
dealing with the workforce.