Now that control of the majority is hanging in the balance, the Brooklyn senator reasoned, it would be a good time to practice
a little bipartisanship.
Not exact matches
But one New York Republican, who knows a
little something about working across the aisle in the interest of political survival, is stepping up to defend the president's newfound interest in
bipartisanship, specifically when it comes to DACA.
One gets the sense that some of the vote on Amendment 66 was a carryover from the general public anger over how many measures, such as gun control, were forced through the legislature with
little deliberation and no
bipartisanship.