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John boehner's Let Tears Fly.

For the speaker of the House of Representatives, who has been in politics for more than 2 years, tears may be needed by the situation or the temperament. However, the topics that make Bona cry are always the same, that is, the market economy, personal freedom and family responsibilities, and the values that the party firmly believes in are gradually losing

Hao Yuan, a special contributor

As the saying goes, men don't cry lightly. John boehner, the speaker of the "new section" of the US House of Representatives, and a Republican, is famous for his love of tears. Whether giving a speech in support of the rescue plan for Wall Street or condemning the Democratic Party's Iraq policy, Bona, 6, choked up tears more than once in the congressional lecture.

For Bona, who has been in politics for more than 2 years, tears may be the result of his temperament or the need of the situation. However, the topic that makes Bona cry is always the same, that is, personal freedom, market economy and family responsibilities, and the values that the party firmly believes in are losing. "I cherish these concepts and practice them. "This is the American dream that I have been pursuing all my life," Bona sobbed when the election was held and the party regained the majority in the House of Representatives. Due to his early business experience, Bona believed in the market economy and hated any form of government supervision. In the mid-term election, he criticized the economic stimulus plan and health care reform bill promoted by the Democratic Party, saying that Washington's leftist actions were divorced from the reality of the United States and violated the spirit of free competition in the market economy. In order to win the support of voters, Bona always talks about his civilian background and entrepreneurial hardships. He told people that he worked in a small hotel run by his father since he was a child, and he finished college on the income of night shift. He also "made every effort to run a small plastic company". "When I saw that Washington was so divorced from reality, I filled in my name and ran for office!"

In fact, Bona, who has been in Congress for 2 years and has twice entered the party leadership, is by no means an "outsider" in Washington as he described. There is hardly any trace of his birth from the grassroots. Bona, who is obsessed with golf, is tanned, smokes camel cigarettes, dresses exquisitely, and is either rich or expensive. In the Democratic Party's view, Bona is not a representative of the middle-and low-income working class, but the richest man who is the most untrustworthy of the American people and the embodiment of the party's political factions, politically conservative and colluding with interest groups.

In the meeting of the House of Representatives, Bona, a heavy smoker, never sits still and sneaks out to smoke every hour. In his life, he is surrounded by lobbyists of lobbying groups, and it is common for him to travel by corporate private jet. In 27, Congress wanted to introduce a bill to prohibit enterprises from sponsoring parliamentarians to travel, because Bona could not stop it. During the mid-term election season, various interest groups sponsored $158, for Bona's 4 trips. A few hours before delivering a victory speech on behalf of * * and the Party, Bona met with more than forty close friends and consultants in an Italian restaurant near the Congress, most of whom were lobbyists from banks, insurance companies and other big companies.

Bona leads an exquisite life. The parties he holds are famous for their luxury. They are usually located in seaside resorts, where guests can play golf for free. He loves to use cologne and washes and irons his shirts himself every day. He can't help joking when he sees others untidy. Political cartoonists therefore portrayed Bona as a politician who lingered in country clubs, and golf, dark skin and lobbyists became his labels. Represented by him, * * * and party conservatives are loyal defenders of various interest groups. It is their natural instinct to support private enterprises, hate taxes and minimum wages, and oppose government supervision. They firmly support all the policies of former President George W. Bush and oppose everything of Barack Obama.

Of course, Bona occasionally deviates from the * * * and the party's tone, and his position on issues such as immigration and trade is comparable to that of the American Chamber of Commerce. But that doesn't mean that he is a centrist or a moderate. "I have the most conservative voting record in Congress," he said, "but I never pin it on my sleeve or throw it to others' face." After 2 years of ups and downs in Congress, Bona read all the partisan struggles and political infighting between the two parties. He used to work for * * * and the party's conservative elder newt gingrich. When Gingrich was the Speaker of the House of Representatives from 1995 to 1998, Bona witnessed how the Republican Party blocked the operation of the Democratic government in Congress, which led to political paralysis and loss of popular support, and eventually lost the presidential election. Bona has also participated in rare cross-party cooperation between the Party and the Democratic Party. During former President Bush's term, Bona served in the education reform project presided over by Democratic Party veteran Edward Kennedy.

Now as Speaker of the House of Representatives, Bona's main challenge is still how to make good use of the double-edged sword of partisan struggle. Bona needs to prove to conservative political forces, including the "tea party", that he is willing to challenge the Obama administration and the Democratic Party, and has the ability to maintain the principle of "big market, small government" that the Party firmly believes in. Before Boehner officially became the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Republican Party had made it clear that it would launch an offensive against the Democratic Party from three aspects, namely, launching a vote in the House of Representatives to repeal the health care reform bill, cut the government budget and control the upper limit of the fiscal deficit.

However, under the circumstance that the Democratic Party still controls the majority of seats in the Senate, the above-mentioned "provocative" acts of the * * * and the Party have no hope of success in legislation, and the most likely result is a protracted parliamentary deadlock and political paralysis. In this way, the * * * and the party that actively provoked the party struggle may become the target of public criticism and lose the support of voters again in the 212 presidential election. Due to the complicated situation of party struggle, Bona was cautious after being elected. Although claiming that "we will never compromise on our principles", Bona has been slow to express his position on how to cut the budget and limit the deficit. Bona's success is attributed to his diligence and extraordinary "emotional intelligence" acquired in his big family. Bona was born in a blue-collar family in Reading, Ohio. His father was the owner of a small hotel and his mother worked in a restaurant in her early years. Among the 12 children in the family, Bona is the second child. From an early age, he and his brother Bob arranged for his brothers and sisters to clean up the housework and look after the business.

"It's not difficult to learn to compromise when a large family is together," my brother Bob recalled. "John always has a way to persuade others to work." Bona also worked hard. He works as a handyman in his father's hotel. In order to deliver the Sunday Morning Post, he got up at 3 a.m. on Sunday and stopped delivering it at 6 a.m. only to attend the mass of the Catholic Church. He does odd jobs, drives bulldozers and repairs roofs, although he has to overcome his fear of heights. Only when the football season comes every year, Bona, a member of the high school team, will stop his work and devote himself to the game. Bonner's coach Gary Foster praised him as a hard-working team leader.

However, no one expected Bona to achieve today's success. At school, he was not a good student. After graduating from high school, he found a job as a janitor. Brother Bob thinks that Bona wouldn't go to college at all if it weren't for pursuing his wife Debbie. "To get close to Debbie, he needs to be educated," Bob said. Bona enrolled in Xavier University Night University, and the first reading was 7 years. After graduating from college in 1977, he worked in a plastic company, from sales to chairman and partner of the board of directors, from working boy to millionaire. Bona and Debbie tied the knot, and both daughters are grown up now. On the first day of the opening of the new Congress on January 5, Bona took over the speaker's mallet under the attention of his wife and daughter, and as the speaker of the House of Representatives, he thanked his family for their support and shed tears again.

what kind of speaker will Boehner be? How will he influence the political outlook of the Party and the United States? At the beginning of the term of the 112th US Congress, it may be too early to answer these questions. Time magazine in the United States reported that it is enough to sum up Bona's political style in one word. Bona can be described as the "fund-raising machine" of * * * and the Party. In the mid-term election season, he raised $46 million for * * * and the Party. He can't forget the debt to others, and he clearly remembers who owes himself.

*** and Party Congressman Tim Murphy did not donate money to * * * and the Party National Committee. When he asked Bona for support on energy issues, he was asked, "Why should I help you?" The next day, Murphy donated $3, to support this organization dedicated to helping * * * and Republicans run for the House of Representatives. The House of Representatives voted on the Obama administration's economic stimulus plan, and moderate Joseph Cao voted against it. The next day, his campaign team received a donation of $5, from Bona.