little more than that. however, for the entire year, all of the major markets are positive and actually quite strongly positive. you ll remember in the third quarter last year, the markets did fairly poorly. let s take a quick look. dow is up 8 3/4% for the year, s&p up 9% for the year and nasdaq up 11% for the year. a reminder as special counsel robert mueller continues his investigation into rush s possible interference in the 2016 election, we here at msnbc are diving into the relationship between president trump and russian president vladimir putin. watch russia: if you re listening, trump and putin hosted by me sunday at 9:00 p.m. eastern here on msnbc. that wraps up this hour for me. i m not done though. i will be right back if at 10:00 p.m. eastern. you can always find me on social media, facebook, twitter, instagram and linked in. i love hearing from you. thank you for watching. deadline: white house with nicolle wallace starts now.
american corporate profits offshore. in our plan we call for 8 3/4% taxation of that. using that to fund infrastructure would be a better way to go. you then get the funding for infrastructure and a repaytration of that money to help create american jobs. that s the better way to go. we ll all be struggling it issues of infrastructure. in new jersey we spend $1.6 billion a year on infrastructure improvements. we re going to have to deal with our transportation trust fund in the next year and a half and confront those issues. the infrastructure problem is not a one-time problem. we ve cut our infrastructure spending in half in real terms over the last 20 years. why wouldn t you put a significant not even one or two cents, significant gas tax to both help with the global warming problem, to help with the energy use problem and to fund a continuing program of
wool over the eyes of the voters here? this is what he said. he understands that he s a world famous star right now and whether he s in tenth minute or 14 1/2, here in toronto, he s used up 8 3/4 of his political cat lives. but he sees something bigger and he s playing it for all it s worth. reporter: he might have just a quarter of a cat life left. but really there are a lot of people out here in the suburbs who still support him. back to you. nic, you spoke to the deputy mayor who now has a whole lot more power because of the city council vote. what have you learned? reporter: yeah. this is a guy who wants to kind of take it a little easy and step back. he says the mayor is overheated
and the doctor comes the question about a wife finding a hair clip underer her bed with another parent in it. after the parent called the school, the teacher apologized and said she hadn t read this beforehanding it out to students. tucker: can you imagine? unbelievable. how about this, a new book is out looking basically how we spend our entire lives. it s fascinating and the new york post has broken this down based on the sometime of spend we do with makeup, working out, sleeping, talking, arguing, eating, everything. here are some of the major ones that stand out. and here is the the first one. the hours spent sleeping. anna: i don t buy this one. clayton: at all. during the weekday we spend about 8.4 8 3/4 hours sleeping during the weekdays. on the weekend 9 1/2 hours, that s on average. i don t believe that for a
this is goldman sachs, the very well known investment banker, very powerful and famous, they ve come flat out and said, look, we are not going to have the kind of vigorous recovery that we were expecting to have. as you point out, they say, look, unemployment is still going to be 8 3/4 percent by the end of next year and the economy will not pick up rapidly but slow down a little bit from where it is now. we ve done some digging into the government s own figures. if the economy was expanding nicely, rapidly, you would expect the government would be taking in a lot more money, because more people are working, they are spending and they would be taxed more. that is not happening. in june of this year the amount of money flowing into the treasury was actually less than it was in june of last year, about a billion and a half less. there you have it. we ve got from 251 billion, 249 this june. that is not a picture of an