aren t my facts. these are the facts. try to wrap your head around 800,000 workers furloughed or working without pay. according to the new york times, that s more than double the work force of target or four times gm. even if you take say the treasury department, with more than 72,000 people on unpaid leave, that is three times the work force of facebook. the furloughs at the interior department are more than ten times the staff of netflix. we, however, are fully staffed around the table this hour. eddie glaud, a professor at princeton, rena shaw, a republican strategist, iesha mootd moody mills and nick ackerman. we begin on capitol hill. still no sign of progress, i presume. but pelosi says she s pushing ahead this week. reporter: wasn t that a
federal workers, the president is talking about, who want him to keep holding their paychecks until he gets funding for the wall. that was the only way we could make sense of what that meant. you did hear him say during the news conference, he didn t use strike there, but did say that he doesn t like calling it a shutdown. which is obviously at odds with three weeks ago. yeah. you more detail on what pelosi calls a sometimes contentious meeting. you write the speaker told homeland security secretary kirstjen nielsen, quote, i reject your facts. the secretary replies, these aren t my facts. these are the facts. obviously, it s an administration that said there was alternative facts. from what i understand, this has happened a couple times now.
things that outrage people the people who aren t offended by children being tear gassed at the border are offended by this so people need to take a step back and say what is offensive here? and the president s potty mouth is the least of my concerns about him. i wouldn t make my top 100 list of complaints about him. my clients are about his policies and even the p word incident that we had, my issue isn t the use of the word, my issue is him talking about grabbing women so it s not about being clutching the pearls and being upset about potty language. anderson, can yes, go ahead, governor. i wanted to say one quick work about the impeachment question because the swearing is one and the impeachment is another. i don t want to set up an expectation that what the house can do to bring impeachment charges is going to lead to the president s outer. i worry that the call for
willingness to pcompromise. nancy pelosi is being asked, will you give one penny? not one penny. the president has not taken that tack. he said other things, some of which van referred to. he has gone to bat for coast guard in particular. there are real people involved here. i live in northern virginia. of course, the ring counties around washington, d.c. get attention because of the ties and reliance on the federal government and the employment there and the federal contractors that van noted are in a different situation. i agree with him that are different from federal employees who can expect, if history is guide, back pay. around here, traffic is lighter. people have curtailed plans. people are staying home who aren t going to work. they re doing other things. frankly, when you hear the two sides negotiating about this, talking in the long-term ways