We’ll see.
I’ll believe it when I see him hold up the signed bill like he’s doing show-and-tell. Until then, all of these hints are just BS from the bootlickers.
He has little choice. He can sign it and avoid the embarrassment of having his veto overridden, he can refuse to sign it and have it become law anyway in 10 days, or he can veto it and be publicly rebuked and humiliated by his own party in Congress.
Это не сделает босса счастливым.
He does seem to be backed into a corner. We’ll see.
Донни говорит: «Это заставляет меня болеть»
But Sanders said the White House was able to work with the House and Senate to “make those changes that were necessary.” She didn’t specify what those changes were, however. The congressional review section wasn’t altered substantially and Democrats were satisfied with the results.
I’ll wait to see what exactly those changes were and if tRump gets something slipped in at the last minute to alleviate his administration’s concerns over executive authority that Republicans still might be willing to allow. The thing to look out for is that threshold or timeframe for when he can lift sanctions on the energy sector for instance and under what circumstances. I don’t trust any of these pukes…but this is at least a good start to show tRump there are restrictions on his ability to reward Russia for personally helping him get (s)elected.
We’ll know if this is a strong bill for sanctions if Russia reacts and begins calling in their chits with the tRumps. And we’ll know if they’re really pissed if they finally decide to release the PP tape, I guess.