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May 8, 2012: Sen. Charles Schumer speaks to reporters following a weekly
strategy luncheon.APSen. Chuck Schumer said Sunday he's hoping for a bipartisan
deal by the end of this week on a sweeping immigration bill
to secure the border and allow eventual citizenship to the estimated 11
million people living here illegally."All of us have said that there will
be no agreement until the eight of us agree to a big,
specific bill, but hopefully we can get that done by the end
of the week," said Schumer, D-N.Y., who's leading efforts by eight senators
to craft the legislation. "That's what we're on track to do."Schumer spoke
on CBS' "Face the Nation" alongside Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., another leader
of the immigration talks, who suggested there could be a tough road
ahead for the contentious legislation."There will be a great deal of unhappiness
about this proposal because everybody didn't get what they wanted," McCain
said. "There are entrenched positions on both sides of this issue as
far as business and labor."A deal on immigration is a top second-term
priority for President Barack Obama, and his senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer
said Sunday that the bill being developed in the Senate is completely
consistent Obama's approach -- even though the Senate plan would tie border
security to a path to citizenship in a manner Obama administration officials
have criticized.Pfeiffer didn't answer directly when asked on "Fox News
Sunday" whether Obama woul
A North Carolina lawmaker says he regrets any embarrassment caused by a
resolution that was proposed and defeated - this week that would
have given the state the right to declare an official religion.The resolution
was filed Monday by two Republican legislators and co-signed by 11 others.The
bill was filed in response to a lawsuit filed in March by
the American Civil Liberties Union against the Rowan County Board of Commissioners,
which court records show opened 97 percent of its meetings in 2007
with Christian prayers. The ACLU accused the panel of violating the First
Amendment by routinely praying to Jesus Christ.One of the North Carolina
bills sponsors, Rep. Harry Warren, said the now-dead resolution was poorly
written. It declared that states are sovereign from federal oversight and
could independently "make laws respecting an establishment of religion."Warren
says he only intended to allow Rowan County officials to continue opening
meetings with prayer, not to establish a state religion.The commissioners,
who deliver the prayers themselves, routinely call on Jesus Christ and refer
to other sectarian beliefs during invocations, the ACLU wrote in a statement.
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