cut, unemployment benefits, tax credits for businesses, protection against bias for unemployed job applicants. despite the president s hard line push to nas bill and tireless national campaign, obama s jobs plan essentially die ted hands of senate republicans tuesday on a key procedural vote. 60 votes were needed. clearly, the votes just weren t there. the president knew it was coming. he now has to rethink and regroup. the republicans don t exactly have a concrete alternative jobs bill to fix the problem. so the big question is what happens now? are we back to square one or do we call it plan b? whatever you want to call it let s talk about it with someone who knows a lot about it chief national correspondent and anchor, john king, joining us live now from washington. hi there, john. so the president, he says that he is prepared to break his jobs bill now into pieces in the hopes of getting parts of it throughsome that the answer here, do you think? it is the only answer b
determined, the issue of liberty is at issue and more people wants to be taken care of than maybe it was the donald, you have won two years in a row and why are you so popular there? sn i hope because the messages popular and people like it but it is definitely a younger crowd there and i think young people realize the bad rap they are getting and, i think they see in the message of liberty, maybe they d have a better life if they had a freer country and less taxes, no income tax, get the government out of their personal lives and they are attracted to the foreign policy of less intervention overseas. bill: we see numbers from the wall street journal that will make your head spin. it will make everybody s spin, from 2008 we were spending $434 billion a year in nondiscretionary and nondefense discretionary spending, and that went to 537 billion and 24%
when the rainy season begins. we were at one camp where the rain drove people to the streets in protests. there were more of those this week as well, demanding that the government do more than they have at this point. the aide effort has been immense. 537 billion from the u.s. alone. it s getting better, but not there yet. there so many still in desperate need. as if you have to look at it almost a day at a time because when you think long-term, it is overwhelming. it really is. it s hard to get your head around it even here. that contrast with one of the food distributions i saw friday morning where yes, wpf and usaid distributing rice, but it s only the strong who can get there and