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Search resuls for: "Warren Christopher"


3 mentions found


Opinion | Democrats Need to Stop Playing Nice
  + stars: | 2024-03-11 | by ( Joe Klein | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
There is a moment in the 2008 HBO movie “Recount” that illuminates an essential difference between Republicans and Democrats. Warren Christopher, a courtly former secretary of state, represents the Democratic candidate Al Gore. Democrats litigate; Republicans fight. Democrats float toward an almost helium-infused state of high-mindedness; Republicans see politics as a no-holds-barred cage match. But given the party’s recent history, the Democrats will probably need some CRISPR editing to their DNA.
Persons: Warren Christopher, Al Gore, , ” James Baker, George W, Bush, Christopher, Baker, Biden’s Organizations: HBO, Democrats, Democratic, Democrats litigate, Republicans, Union Locations: Florida, United States, Biden’s pugilistic State
Opinion | Farewell to the U.S.-China Golden Age
  + stars: | 2023-11-14 | by ( Farah Stockman | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
A lunch meeting about China this summer at the Upper East Side headquarters of the Council on Foreign Relations felt more like an Irish wake. A crowd that included gray-haired China hands and not-so-gray-haired tech executives shared memories of their years in the Middle Kingdom as diplomats, entrepreneurs and English teachers in the countryside. They were all keenly aware that they had lived through an extraordinary period of warm relations that is now gone, perhaps forever. China has closed itself off.”The nostalgia was poignant but the gathering was also notable for what it represented. That lunch meeting underlined the fact that China was turning into something they hadn’t expected — and slipping out of their reach.
Persons: Warren Christopher, , ” Ian Johnson Organizations: Foreign Relations, U.S, Washington, New York Times Locations: China, Middle Kingdom, Taipei, Taiwan, Beijing, United States
Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro came to Florida late last year on a visa. To deport him, the Secretary of State could rule that Bolsonaro is harming US foreign policy. Late last year, Bolsonaro, while still Brazil's head of state, came to Florida, with people spotting him everywhere from fast-food joints to grocery stores. Under federal law, Bolsonaro could be deported if the Secretary of State has "reasonable grounds" to believe that his presence in the country "would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the United States." Under that provision, Bolsonaro could be deported whether or not he has even been charged with a crime.
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