language used on the tarmac, ari fliescher made great points about all of this is a dance, i mean, it s diplomacy on both siechldz the president s language, i think, was carefully chosen to signal a receptiveness to what is going on, the release was as well. it s a dance. you contrast that with what we didn t see from iran in the wake of the nuclear agreement. they, too, had the opportunity to come to the table. they could have allowed site inspections. they could have slowed down their ballistic missile program. they could have released prisoners. they could have done some of the things that we re seeing from north korea now in response to a softening stance from president obama. they never did that. if anything they got harder. that contrast is useful to look at right now. zach, i want to ask this question, when you talk about language, you know, the former president, barack obama, took a lot of heat for his language, calling the islamic state savages.
huge republican priority on capitol hill. next stop back to the house of representatives a lot of republicans there are unhappy with the deal, they should not be bumping up the debt ceiling growing the nation s debt to 20 trillion. there should be meaningful action in terms of looking at a way to get a handle on the debt. expect plenty of republicans to vote no tomorrow. not against texas, not against the hurricane victims, but against incurring debt without taking meaningful action. so next stop, it goes to the house. then presumably, to the president s desk. and the notes that i m getting from our producer on the hill is that could happen within the house as early as tomorrow. mike emmanuel, thanks for filling the details. this was breaking as the president was speaking. leslie, we spoke about democrats being careful not to overplay their hand. they ve got a victory of sorts on this. but you know, ari fliescher was here, former press secretary for george w. bush. he said this is a