Illegal-immigration temptation (The Christian Science Monitor)
13th Nov 2006, 16:50 GMT
The Christian Science Monitor - President Bush may have won at least something in last week's election. A Democratic Congress could lean more closely toward his ideas on dealing with illegal immigration. But before the two now try to look bipartisan and pass something quickly, they should scrutinize the tea leaves in the ballot results.
Illegal-immigration temptation (The Christian Science Monitor) related news:
- It heats. It powers. Is it the future of home energy? (The Christian Science Monitor) — Yahoo! News: Science News
- Giving newspapers breathing room (The Christian Science Monitor) — Yahoo! News: Opinion
- Cuba won't abandon socialism just yet (The Christian Science Monitor) — Yahoo! News: Opinion
- For Iraqis, news is a deadly business (The Christian Science Monitor) — Yahoo! News: Iraq
- Today's Article on Christian Science: An impossible dream? — Christian Science Monitor | The Home Forum
- Today's Article on Christian Science: Of magistrates and moments of grace — Christian Science Monitor | The Home Forum
- No clash of civilizations, says UN report (The Christian Science Monitor) — Yahoo! News: Mideast Conflict
- Pentagon imperative: a spotlight on Africa (The Christian Science Monitor) — Yahoo! News: Opinion
- Huge task before Iraq Study Group (The Christian Science Monitor) — Yahoo! News: Iraq
- Palestinians shift leaders in bid for aid (The Christian Science Monitor) — Yahoo! News: Mideast Conflict
Latest news from Yahoo! News: Opinion:
- As Iraq unravels, many ideas but no magic bullet (USATODAY.com)
- Cuba won't abandon socialism just yet (The Christian Science Monitor)
- Put brakes on drug plan 'fix' (USATODAY.com)
- 'There is no reason to wait' (USATODAY.com)
- The Lure of the Majority (RealClearPolitics.com)
- Rationalizing Losing (RealClearPolitics.com)
- Pelosi Backs Murtha for No. 2: Iraq over Ethics? (The Nation)
- John McCain Had a Good Election Day (RealClearPolitics.com)
- Conservative Dissonance (The Nation)
- Donkey vs. Donkey (The Weekly Standard)