Congressional Republicans are moving to halt the Obama administration s plan to take in more Syrian refugees following the Paris terrorist attacks. Paris attacks prompt resistance to Syrian refugees 06:10 Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, told reporters Tuesday morning that the Syrian refugee situation requires a pause. He said he has assembled a task force to develop legislation that addresses the administration s plan to take in at least 10,000 refugees from Syria over the next year. We think it s necessary to have a pause, Ryan said. We ve assembled a task force starting Saturday to consider legislation as quickly as possible. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, told reporters Tuesday afternoon that th <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.fr>stanley cup</a> ere should be a pause or moratorium in the admission of Syrian refugees.As details trickled out over the weekend about the suspects behind Friday s attacks, authorities said that a Syrian passport -- which U.S. intelligence says may be fake -- was found near the body of one of the attackers, raising questions about whether he might have entered France as a refugee. That key detail has immediately sparked <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.ca>stanley tumbler</a> an uproar over President Obama s decision to accept at least 10,000 additional refu <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.pl>stanley kubek</a> gees from Syria into the U.S. over the next ye Iqvh Obama Downplays Expectations in Pennsylvania
Trisha Swonger, part of the remarkable 43 percent of New Hampshire voters who call themselves independents, remembers the balloons and euphoria in 2000 when her man, John McCain, won the state s leadoff Republican primary.He d better not be counting on her this year.In fact, come primary day, the Republicans shouldn t be counting on very many of the independents at all. In 2000, Swonger joined McCain and other supporters in a hotel ballroom cheering his big New Hampshire victory over George W. Bush. But times have changed. The John McCain who is running this time is not the John McCain I supported in 2000, Swonger said, standing outside a house party for her current candidate, Democratic Sen. Barack Obama. I don t want anything to do with this guy. Or his party. Undeclareds, as independents are called in New Hampshire, ar <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.fr>stanley cup</a> e congr <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.ca>stanley water bottle</a> egating around the Democratic race.Four out of 10 say they plan to vote in the Democratic primary, and about the same number say they aren t sure which ballot they will pick up on primary day. Only 19 percent are pl <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley spain</a> anning to vote in the Republican primary, according to a recent poll by Saint Anselm College s Institute of Politics.In contrast, undeclareds in 2000 broke heavily for Republicans - 62 percent to 38 percent - thanks to keen interest in the Bush-McCain race and the lackluster campaigns of Al Gore and Bill Bradley.The 43 percent of voters who register as undeclared in New Hampshire outnumber