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Democrats divided on path to 2016

The tension - shown in high relief during the messy final days of the congressional session - is in some ways a mirror image of the stresses within the Republican Party, which has been divided between its tea party and establishment factions in recent years.

In the case of both parties, the argument pits the more populist, purist elements of the base against the more pragmatic center.

For Democrats, "it is a conflict that was looking for an occasion," said William Galston, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, who was a policy adviser to former President Bill Clinton. "The election provided the occasion."

They are personified by Hillary Rodham Clinton, the former secretary of state who is the presumptive presidential front-runner by virtue of her stature and fame, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, the anti-Wall Street clarion favored by many on the left to challenge Clinton for the Democratic nomination.

If the loss of the Senate intensified strains within the party, the $1.1 trillion spending bill that passed Saturday night raised two issues that acted as matches to gasoline. One was a provision rolling back portions of the 2010 financial regulatory law known as the Dodd-Frank Act. The other loosened campaign donation limits, allowing the wealthy to give three times the current maximum to the national political parties. That means even more clout for rich donors and the interests they represent.

In both instances, the question was not whether Democrats supported the individual provisions - they generally do not. It was whether individual members considered them so egregious as to merit blowing up a wide-ranging deal to which Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada had been a party and for which President Obama was personally lobbying.

"What we saw over the last couple of days is an example of a debate that is probably going to go on for a while in the party," said Jim Manley, a Democratic strategist and former aide to Reid.

Proponents of the legislation argued that they had succeeded in preventing even more provisions weakening Dodd-Frank from being inserted in the bill. And at any rate, they said, the legislation was far better than anything Democrats could expect should they allow the debate to continue into next year, when Republicans will be in control of the House and Senate.

But Warren urged her colleagues to hold the line, particularly against the banks whose political influence she accused her own party of abetting.

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Democrats divided on path to 2016

Obama Immigration speech Executive Order on Immigration President Obama Immigration reform – Video


Obama Immigration speech Executive Order on Immigration President Obama Immigration reform
President Barack Obama recently spoke on the executive action he was taking to deal with the broken immigration system in the United States. Stefan Molyneu. #39;Obama #39; Immigration speech #39; #39;Obama...

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Obama Immigration speech Executive Order on Immigration President Obama Immigration reform - Video

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Dubai Film Fest: Eva Longoria Backs Obama's Immigration Reform

With 24 states almost half the U.S. now suing Barack Obamas federal government over its executive action on immigration reform, Eva Longoriasays she backs the president's move, designed to spare millions living illegally from deportation.

Speaking at the Dubai International Film Festival, the actress who is from the state of Texas, which is leading the coalition against Obama's measures said that it was "imperative" that the immigration reforms took place.

"Immigration reform is a global problem. Every country has issues with immigrant labor and industries being dependent on them," she said. "But we have had a 'do nothing' Congress, and I fully support the presidents immigration reform. People have to understand the history of immigration in the United States."

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Longoria has long talked about the issues of immigration. In November, at the New York premiere of the documentary Food Chains, which looks at the lives of tomato farm workers in Florida and on which Longoria was executive producer, she told Fox News Latino that something needed to be done.

"I do think that some action needs to be taken, and if Congress isnt willing to do it, we need to explore all options," she said.

Speaking to Latina Magazine in August, she said she was disappointed that the debate was often being led by those who didn't understand the situation.

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"I just wish people would view this with a lens of compassion, and at the same time, educate themselves on ignorant statements like, 'These people come here to suck dry our social services.' Thats not true."

Longorias first Spanish-speaking role, the Michael Berry-directed Frontera, was set on the Arizona-Mexico border and tackled issues of immigration. Released earlier in the year, it also starred Ed Harris and Michael Pena.

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Dubai Film Fest: Eva Longoria Backs Obama's Immigration Reform

Police Harassment First Amendment Test Aliso Viejo Orange County Sheriff – Video


Police Harassment First Amendment Test Aliso Viejo Orange County Sheriff
12-10-2014 Decided to go out and take some video, was questioned and followed by the Orange County Sheriffs Department in Aliso Viejo Ca. I tried to stay pol...

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Police Harassment First Amendment Test Aliso Viejo Orange County Sheriff - Video