Refresh our memory...what has this congress tried to get done for real Americans?

Let me remind you of the topic, the OP is trying to may the inactivity at the feet of democrats, and that's a lie.

Would you like.to comment on that?
Lets see the dems all claimed the bills they IGNORED were not viable so why was that acceptable then but not now?
Most of the stuff being thrown up then was just for show. They had no expectations of passing them so the more outrageous the better.
Also, McConnell is telling you he's blocking stuff just because it was proposed by democrats.
That is what was done by Democrats whats good for the goose is good for the gander. As for passing bills reasonable ones that are bipartisan are IN FACT voted on and you know it.
No, I don't. Show us some.
So if we are to believe your partisan claim then NO BILL has passed the Senate from the House since January.I am not stupid but you sure must be if you believe that.
 
The crux of the OP is in the last two words of the title...'real Americans'.
You obviously think 'real' Americans are the white trailer-trash that forms 'the base', and, frankly, Congress doesn't give a shit about you lot, you're never going the change.
 
Remind me Care how you were upset for 2 years when the dem controlled senate blocked over 200 bills from the Republican house? Or is that different?
were the 200 bills ALL on killing Obamacare?
And there we have it a brain dead leftist that whines about Republicans doing EXACTLY what her party did for 2 years. Keep proving you are a partisan hack Care.
well, were they all on killing healthcare with no replacement? No one expected those bills to ever pass the Senate...

Nancy's bills have been bipartisan bills, have bipartisan support even IN THE SENATE but Mitch the Grim Reaper, will not bring them up, because he knows the Senate will pass them with Republican support, and the grim reaper can't let Pelosi get a win!
Liar name a bipartisan bill that had more then a token republican vote total that the Senate did not act on. As for Republican bills you and I both know you are lying through your teeth about what they were.
 
Remind me Care how you were upset for 2 years when the dem controlled senate blocked over 200 bills from the Republican house? Or is that different?
were the 200 bills ALL on killing Obamacare?
And there we have it a brain dead leftist that whines about Republicans doing EXACTLY what her party did for 2 years. Keep proving you are a partisan hack Care.
well, were they all on killing healthcare with no replacement? No one expected those bills to ever pass the Senate...

Nancy's bills have been bipartisan bills, have bipartisan support even IN THE SENATE but Mitch the Grim Reaper, will not bring them up, because he knows the Senate will pass them with Republican support, and the grim reaper can't let Pelosi get a win!
Liar name a bipartisan bill that had more then a token republican vote total that the Senate did not act on. As for Republican bills you and I both know you are lying through your teeth about what they were.



House Judiciary Unanimously Passes Bipartisan Bills to Lower Prescription Drug Prices


Apr 30, 2019
Washington, D.C. – Today, the House Judiciary Committee unanimously passed four bills to address prescription drug pricing, including H.R. 965, the CREATES Act; H.R. 2375, the Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act; H.R. 2374, the Stop STALLING Act; and H.R. 2376, the Prescription Pricing for the People Act of 2019. This markup is part of the first phase of the Committee’s agenda to lower the soaring cost of prescription drugs.



House Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law Chairman David N. Cicilline (D-RI) released the following joint statement:



“For far too long, large brand prescription drug companies have engaged in bully tactics to stifle competition from generic competitors and keep drug prices high. The bipartisan legislation passed out of the committee today takes steps to address these tactics, to encourage competition and to ultimately reduce prescription drug prices for Americans. We are proud to advance this bipartisan legislation for the people and will work to ensure its passage from the House.”



House Judiciary Ranking Member Doug Collins (R-GA) and Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law Ranking Member Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) released the following joint statement:



“The bills we passed out of committee today would truly deliver solutions to decrease the costs of prescription drugs while increasing patients’ access to the best health care possible. We appreciate the partnership of Chairman Nadler and Subcommittee Chairman Cicilline on these important pieces of legislation and look forward to continue working together to promote competition and decrease pharmaceutical costs.”



Background:



H.R. 2375, the Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act



The Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act, introduced by Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Ranking Member Doug Collins (R-GA), strengthens the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) ability to challenge anticompetitive pay-for-delay agreements in court. Pay-for-delay agreements occur when a brand-name pharmaceutical drug company pays a competitor to keep a generic or biosimilar version of the branded drug off the market as part of a patent settlement. These deals delay access to more affordable generic and biosimilar drugs, costing consumers and the government billions of dollars in higher drug costs. The Senate companion bill, S. 64, Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act, was introduced by Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), together with Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Joni Ernst (R-IA), and Kevin Cramer (R-ND) as original cosponsors on January 9, 2019.



H.R. 965, the CREATES Act



The Creating and Restoring Equal Access to Equivalent Samples (CREATES) Act (H.R. 965), introduced by Congressman David N. Cicilline (RI-01) and Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner (WI-05), will prohibit big pharmaceutical companies from engaging in anti-competitive conduct to prevent generic versions of prescription drugs from entering the marketplace. The CREATES Act is co-sponsored by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (NY-10) and Full Committee Ranking Member Doug Collins (GA-09). The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that Cicilline and Sensenbrenner’s proposal will save taxpayers $3.9 billion.



H.R. 2374, the Stop STALLING Act



Congressman Hakeem Jeffries’s (NY-08) and Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner’s (WI-04) Stop Significant and Time-wasting Abuse Limiting Legitimate Innovation of New Generics (Stop STALLING) Act will curb the abuse of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) citizen petition process and expand access to prescription drugs by reducing incentives for branded pharmaceutical companies to interfere with the regulatory approval of generics and biosimilars that compete with their own products.



H.R. 2376, the Prescription Pricing for the People Act of 2019



Prescription Pricing for the People Act of 2019, introduced by Ranking Member Doug Collins (R-GA) and Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY), would require that the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) conduct a study on the state of competition in the drug supply chain. This study would focus on whether pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, have engaged in any anti-competitive practices, such as steering patients to pharmacies for anti-competitive purposes, giving such pharmacies more favorable rates than it offers to competing pharmacies, or using its market power to depress the use of lower-cost prescription drugs.


House Judiciary Unanimously Passes Bipartisan Bills to Lower Prescription Drug Prices

 
Remind me Care how you were upset for 2 years when the dem controlled senate blocked over 200 bills from the Republican house? Or is that different?
were the 200 bills ALL on killing Obamacare?
And there we have it a brain dead leftist that whines about Republicans doing EXACTLY what her party did for 2 years. Keep proving you are a partisan hack Care.
well, were they all on killing healthcare with no replacement? No one expected those bills to ever pass the Senate...

Nancy's bills have been bipartisan bills, have bipartisan support even IN THE SENATE but Mitch the Grim Reaper, will not bring them up, because he knows the Senate will pass them with Republican support, and the grim reaper can't let Pelosi get a win!
Liar name a bipartisan bill that had more then a token republican vote total that the Senate did not act on. As for Republican bills you and I both know you are lying through your teeth about what they were.



House Judiciary Unanimously Passes Bipartisan Bills to Lower Prescription Drug Prices


Apr 30, 2019
Washington, D.C. – Today, the House Judiciary Committee unanimously passed four bills to address prescription drug pricing, including H.R. 965, the CREATES Act; H.R. 2375, the Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act; H.R. 2374, the Stop STALLING Act; and H.R. 2376, the Prescription Pricing for the People Act of 2019. This markup is part of the first phase of the Committee’s agenda to lower the soaring cost of prescription drugs.



House Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law Chairman David N. Cicilline (D-RI) released the following joint statement:



“For far too long, large brand prescription drug companies have engaged in bully tactics to stifle competition from generic competitors and keep drug prices high. The bipartisan legislation passed out of the committee today takes steps to address these tactics, to encourage competition and to ultimately reduce prescription drug prices for Americans. We are proud to advance this bipartisan legislation for the people and will work to ensure its passage from the House.”



House Judiciary Ranking Member Doug Collins (R-GA) and Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law Ranking Member Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) released the following joint statement:



“The bills we passed out of committee today would truly deliver solutions to decrease the costs of prescription drugs while increasing patients’ access to the best health care possible. We appreciate the partnership of Chairman Nadler and Subcommittee Chairman Cicilline on these important pieces of legislation and look forward to continue working together to promote competition and decrease pharmaceutical costs.”



Background:



H.R. 2375, the Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act



The Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act, introduced by Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Ranking Member Doug Collins (R-GA), strengthens the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) ability to challenge anticompetitive pay-for-delay agreements in court. Pay-for-delay agreements occur when a brand-name pharmaceutical drug company pays a competitor to keep a generic or biosimilar version of the branded drug off the market as part of a patent settlement. These deals delay access to more affordable generic and biosimilar drugs, costing consumers and the government billions of dollars in higher drug costs. The Senate companion bill, S. 64, Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act, was introduced by Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), together with Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Joni Ernst (R-IA), and Kevin Cramer (R-ND) as original cosponsors on January 9, 2019.



H.R. 965, the CREATES Act



The Creating and Restoring Equal Access to Equivalent Samples (CREATES) Act (H.R. 965), introduced by Congressman David N. Cicilline (RI-01) and Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner (WI-05), will prohibit big pharmaceutical companies from engaging in anti-competitive conduct to prevent generic versions of prescription drugs from entering the marketplace. The CREATES Act is co-sponsored by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (NY-10) and Full Committee Ranking Member Doug Collins (GA-09). The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that Cicilline and Sensenbrenner’s proposal will save taxpayers $3.9 billion.



H.R. 2374, the Stop STALLING Act



Congressman Hakeem Jeffries’s (NY-08) and Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner’s (WI-04) Stop Significant and Time-wasting Abuse Limiting Legitimate Innovation of New Generics (Stop STALLING) Act will curb the abuse of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) citizen petition process and expand access to prescription drugs by reducing incentives for branded pharmaceutical companies to interfere with the regulatory approval of generics and biosimilars that compete with their own products.



H.R. 2376, the Prescription Pricing for the People Act of 2019



Prescription Pricing for the People Act of 2019, introduced by Ranking Member Doug Collins (R-GA) and Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY), would require that the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) conduct a study on the state of competition in the drug supply chain. This study would focus on whether pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, have engaged in any anti-competitive practices, such as steering patients to pharmacies for anti-competitive purposes, giving such pharmacies more favorable rates than it offers to competing pharmacies, or using its market power to depress the use of lower-cost prescription drugs.


House Judiciary Unanimously Passes Bipartisan Bills to Lower Prescription Drug Prices
Ohh I see one bill set and you think you have a point, now put up he total vote from the House.
 
here's some, it's from May2019, more bills affecting our needs have been passed by congress since then.... but here ya go...


Democrats in Congress are getting things done. Trump and Republicans are just ignoring them.

Trump is objectively wrong; House Democrats haven’t been squandering time. In addition to their investigations, they’ve been passing legislation at a rapid clip. In all, the House has taken up 51 bills, resolutions, and suspensions since January — 49 of which they’ve passed. This includes a slate of bills to attempt to end the longest government shutdown in history, the result of a protracted fight between Trump and Congress over border wall funding.



Ironically, over the past two weeks, the House has passed bills to address most of the issues Trump mentioned in his tweet. They recently passed a bill to lower prescription drug prices, and another one to protect preexisting conditions. The House also passed nine bills on veterans issues this week alone, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi noted at her weekly press conference. On Thursday, Democrats tried to present Trump their infrastructure plan before he walked out of their meeting.



So if the House is passing all these bills, why does it seem like Congress isn’t getting anything done? Welcome to the reality of divided government in Washington. The vast majority of House Democrats’ agenda has hit a dead end in the Republican-controlled Senate, where Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has dubbed himself the “grim reaper” of Democratic legislation. Pelosi has blasted the Senate leader for embracing this role, saying he’s working for special interests in Washington, rather than the people of the United States.

“The Senate is the graveyard where bills that pass in the Congress, that have bipartisan support in the country, go to die,” Pelosi said at a recent press conference.


Lessee:
In other words, up to this point, everything in the past ever done by Congress has been bad, exposed, weak, unfair, partisan, unmoving, out of control and short lived. And NOW the Democrats are here to fix it all.

:rolleyes:

But when you actually look at it, all their stuff is either meant for looks never intended to really go anywhere or to just actually further advance the government control and socialization of healthcare, advance minorities, suppress business, tighten restrictions on legal gun ownership, expand government, stand on the military, or find some new way to continue tying up Trump in endless investigations.
 
Remind me Care how you were upset for 2 years when the dem controlled senate blocked over 200 bills from the Republican house? Or is that different?
were the 200 bills ALL on killing Obamacare?
And there we have it a brain dead leftist that whines about Republicans doing EXACTLY what her party did for 2 years. Keep proving you are a partisan hack Care.
well, were they all on killing healthcare with no replacement? No one expected those bills to ever pass the Senate...

Nancy's bills have been bipartisan bills, have bipartisan support even IN THE SENATE but Mitch the Grim Reaper, will not bring them up, because he knows the Senate will pass them with Republican support, and the grim reaper can't let Pelosi get a win!
Liar name a bipartisan bill that had more then a token republican vote total that the Senate did not act on. As for Republican bills you and I both know you are lying through your teeth about what they were.



House Judiciary Unanimously Passes Bipartisan Bills to Lower Prescription Drug Prices


Apr 30, 2019
Washington, D.C. – Today, the House Judiciary Committee unanimously passed four bills to address prescription drug pricing, including H.R. 965, the CREATES Act; H.R. 2375, the Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act; H.R. 2374, the Stop STALLING Act; and H.R. 2376, the Prescription Pricing for the People Act of 2019. This markup is part of the first phase of the Committee’s agenda to lower the soaring cost of prescription drugs.



House Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law Chairman David N. Cicilline (D-RI) released the following joint statement:



“For far too long, large brand prescription drug companies have engaged in bully tactics to stifle competition from generic competitors and keep drug prices high. The bipartisan legislation passed out of the committee today takes steps to address these tactics, to encourage competition and to ultimately reduce prescription drug prices for Americans. We are proud to advance this bipartisan legislation for the people and will work to ensure its passage from the House.”



House Judiciary Ranking Member Doug Collins (R-GA) and Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law Ranking Member Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) released the following joint statement:



“The bills we passed out of committee today would truly deliver solutions to decrease the costs of prescription drugs while increasing patients’ access to the best health care possible. We appreciate the partnership of Chairman Nadler and Subcommittee Chairman Cicilline on these important pieces of legislation and look forward to continue working together to promote competition and decrease pharmaceutical costs.”



Background:



H.R. 2375, the Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act



The Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act, introduced by Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Ranking Member Doug Collins (R-GA), strengthens the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) ability to challenge anticompetitive pay-for-delay agreements in court. Pay-for-delay agreements occur when a brand-name pharmaceutical drug company pays a competitor to keep a generic or biosimilar version of the branded drug off the market as part of a patent settlement. These deals delay access to more affordable generic and biosimilar drugs, costing consumers and the government billions of dollars in higher drug costs. The Senate companion bill, S. 64, Preserve Access to Affordable Generics and Biosimilars Act, was introduced by Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), together with Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Joni Ernst (R-IA), and Kevin Cramer (R-ND) as original cosponsors on January 9, 2019.



H.R. 965, the CREATES Act



The Creating and Restoring Equal Access to Equivalent Samples (CREATES) Act (H.R. 965), introduced by Congressman David N. Cicilline (RI-01) and Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner (WI-05), will prohibit big pharmaceutical companies from engaging in anti-competitive conduct to prevent generic versions of prescription drugs from entering the marketplace. The CREATES Act is co-sponsored by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (NY-10) and Full Committee Ranking Member Doug Collins (GA-09). The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that Cicilline and Sensenbrenner’s proposal will save taxpayers $3.9 billion.



H.R. 2374, the Stop STALLING Act



Congressman Hakeem Jeffries’s (NY-08) and Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner’s (WI-04) Stop Significant and Time-wasting Abuse Limiting Legitimate Innovation of New Generics (Stop STALLING) Act will curb the abuse of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) citizen petition process and expand access to prescription drugs by reducing incentives for branded pharmaceutical companies to interfere with the regulatory approval of generics and biosimilars that compete with their own products.



H.R. 2376, the Prescription Pricing for the People Act of 2019



Prescription Pricing for the People Act of 2019, introduced by Ranking Member Doug Collins (R-GA) and Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY), would require that the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) conduct a study on the state of competition in the drug supply chain. This study would focus on whether pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, have engaged in any anti-competitive practices, such as steering patients to pharmacies for anti-competitive purposes, giving such pharmacies more favorable rates than it offers to competing pharmacies, or using its market power to depress the use of lower-cost prescription drugs.


House Judiciary Unanimously Passes Bipartisan Bills to Lower Prescription Drug Prices
Wow, what a shell game that post was.

You do realize I hope that the House Judiciary is NOT the House of Representatives and that in order for legislation to be passed, it must go through the House, not just a committee?

I'll tell you what though. Let Me go ask Harry "pas the cheddar" Reid about blocking house legislation and motives for doing so.

Oh, and let's see the vote totals. You see, I've seen a hundred claims of bipartisan only to find out it was one or two RINO's the voted and that the left was claiming bipartisanship on that basis.
 
here's some, it's from May2019, more bills affecting our needs have been passed by congress since then.... but here ya go...


Democrats in Congress are getting things done. Trump and Republicans are just ignoring them.

Trump is objectively wrong; House Democrats haven’t been squandering time. In addition to their investigations, they’ve been passing legislation at a rapid clip. In all, the House has taken up 51 bills, resolutions, and suspensions since January — 49 of which they’ve passed. This includes a slate of bills to attempt to end the longest government shutdown in history, the result of a protracted fight between Trump and Congress over border wall funding.



Ironically, over the past two weeks, the House has passed bills to address most of the issues Trump mentioned in his tweet. They recently passed a bill to lower prescription drug prices, and another one to protect preexisting conditions. The House also passed nine bills on veterans issues this week alone, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi noted at her weekly press conference. On Thursday, Democrats tried to present Trump their infrastructure plan before he walked out of their meeting.



So if the House is passing all these bills, why does it seem like Congress isn’t getting anything done? Welcome to the reality of divided government in Washington. The vast majority of House Democrats’ agenda has hit a dead end in the Republican-controlled Senate, where Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has dubbed himself the “grim reaper” of Democratic legislation. Pelosi has blasted the Senate leader for embracing this role, saying he’s working for special interests in Washington, rather than the people of the United States.

“The Senate is the graveyard where bills that pass in the Congress, that have bipartisan support in the country, go to die,” Pelosi said at a recent press conference.
So what you are saying is that they did not want to vote with the Repubs on the same bills the first two years of Trump's presidency. That was the biggest baby act in human history.
 
Lets see the dems all claimed the bills they IGNORED were not viable so why was that acceptable then but not now?
Most of the stuff being thrown up then was just for show. They had no expectations of passing them so the more outrageous the better.
Also, McConnell is telling you he's blocking stuff just because it was proposed by democrats.
That is what was done by Democrats whats good for the goose is good for the gander. As for passing bills reasonable ones that are bipartisan are IN FACT voted on and you know it.
No, I don't. Show us some.
So if we are to believe your partisan claim then NO BILL has passed the Senate from the House since January.I am not stupid but you sure must be if you believe that.
Lol, does this bloviation mean you can't show us any?
 
Most of the stuff being thrown up then was just for show. They had no expectations of passing them so the more outrageous the better.
Also, McConnell is telling you he's blocking stuff just because it was proposed by democrats.
That is what was done by Democrats whats good for the goose is good for the gander. As for passing bills reasonable ones that are bipartisan are IN FACT voted on and you know it.
No, I don't. Show us some.
So if we are to believe your partisan claim then NO BILL has passed the Senate from the House since January.I am not stupid but you sure must be if you believe that.
Lol, does this bloviation mean you can't show us any?
You are claiming NO bill has passed since January and you think that is a winning strategy? How about the recent one that is being voted on RIGHT now the 911 bill?
 
Also, McConnell is telling you he's blocking stuff just because it was proposed by democrats.
That is what was done by Democrats whats good for the goose is good for the gander. As for passing bills reasonable ones that are bipartisan are IN FACT voted on and you know it.
No, I don't. Show us some.
So if we are to believe your partisan claim then NO BILL has passed the Senate from the House since January.I am not stupid but you sure must be if you believe that.
Lol, does this bloviation mean you can't show us any?
You are claiming NO bill has passed since January and you think that is a winning strategy? How about the recent one that is being voted on RIGHT now the 911 bill?
Lol, no I'm not. You're making shit up like a good little tRumpkin.
 
The crux of the OP is in the last two words of the title...'real Americans'.
You obviously think 'real' Americans are the white trailer-trash that forms 'the base', and, frankly, Congress doesn't give a shit about you lot, you're never going the change.

I think we both know “The Base” is anyone not a wetback, a filthy degenerate lowlife, a man in a dress, a pole puffer, a rug muncher, a feminazi or a white guilt whacko.
Further, the Party Of Filth And Foreigners has stolen White Trash from the GOP...The 21st century group of White Trash hates whites, loves your free shit offerings and that anything goes, no boundaries free for all society that your party pushes.
cant-get-a-job-a-millennial-republicans-bust-becausetrump-is-10583125.png
 
Last edited:
The crux of the OP is in the last two words of the title...'real Americans'.
You obviously think 'real' Americans are the white trailer-trash that forms 'the base', and, frankly, Congress doesn't give a shit about you lot, you're never going the change.

English dood...English.
 
Free Education for Illegals..... oh....sorry
Free Health Care for Illegals..... oh....sorry
Free Housing for Illegals..... oh....sorry
Free Get Out of Jail Card for Illegals..... oh....sorry
Free Social Security Benefits for Illegals..... oh....sorry
Free Child Care for Illegals..... oh....sorry
Free Drivers Licenses for Illegals..... oh....sorry
Free Welfare for Illegals..... oh....sorry
Free Open Borders for Illegals..... oh....sorry
Free Heroin for Illegals..... oh....sorry

Nothing?
 
I can provide a list of things they’ve tried to get done for illegals but I’m drawing a blank trying to recall their work for REAL Americans....Anyone?
Bills on veterans stuff, pre-existing conditions, prescription drug pricing, you name it. McConnell is stopping them all in the Senate., Which has done little to no legislating at all.
Remind me how you were upset when the dems did the same thing?
Let me remind you of the topic, the OP is trying to may the inactivity at the feet of democrats, and that's a lie.

Would you like.to comment on that?
When is Nancy Pelosi going to pass an Immigration Reform Bill or do anything at all?
 
I can provide a list of things they’ve tried to get done for illegals but I’m drawing a blank trying to recall their work for REAL Americans....Anyone?
The house sure doing a lot more than the senate.
 
I can provide a list of things they’ve tried to get done for illegals but I’m drawing a blank trying to recall their work for REAL Americans....Anyone?
The house sure doing a lot more than the senate.

Oh hell yes...The House is busting their asses working for Mexico...I don’t deny that. The question is; what have they done to better the lives of REAL Americans?
 
I can provide a list of things they’ve tried to get done for illegals but I’m drawing a blank trying to recall their work for REAL Americans....Anyone?
Bills on veterans stuff, pre-existing conditions, prescription drug pricing, you name it. McConnell is stopping them all in the Senate., Which has done little to no legislating at all.
Remind me how you were upset when the dems did the same thing?
Let me remind you of the topic, the OP is trying to may the inactivity at the feet of democrats, and that's a lie.

Would you like.to comment on that?
When is Nancy Pelosi going to pass an Immigration Reform Bill or do anything at all?
They've passes like 6 of them.

You should talk to Mitch.
 

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