score a speech. let s do it your way, okay? the republican plan that passed the house of representatives. and republicans voted for in the senate would, in the estimate of the cbo require beneficiaries of medicare to pay $6,500 a year more. $6,500 more in medicare benefits than they do today and why are they doing that? they are doing that because they want to preserve i don t think the speaker just says this but they wants want to preserve tax cuts that benefit americans they can t afford and they demonstrate in their plans and i give them credit for. this if you try to balance our budget without revenues, without tax to raise revenues then you are forced to put in place exceptionally harsh cuts not just for medicare beneficiaries but for medicaid. remember, this country, this great nation with our great resources today one in eight americans 40% of americans born
says that it s just not true. chris: the cbo the head of the nonpartisan congressional budget office says we can t score a speech. let s do it your way, okay? the republican plan that passed the house of representatives. and republicans voted for in the senate would, in the estimate of the cbo require beneficiaries of medicare to pay $6,500 a year more. $6,500 more in medicare benefits than they do today and why are they doing that? they are doing that because they want to preserve i don t think the speaker just says this but they wants want to preserve tax cuts that benefit americans they can t afford and they demonstrate in their plans and i give them credit for. this if you try to balance our budget without revenues, without tax to raise revenues then you are forced to put in place exceptionally harsh cuts not just for medicare beneficiaries but for medicaid. remember, this country, this
score a speech. let s do it your way, okay? the republican plan that passed the house of representatives. and republicans voted for in the senate would, in the estimate of the cbo require beneficiaries of medicare to pay $6,500 a year more. $6,500 more in medicare benefits than they do today and why are they doing that? they are doing that because they want to preserve i don t think the speaker just says this but they wants want to preserve tax cuts that benefit americans they can t afford and they demonstrate in their plans and i give them credit for. this if you try to balance our budget without revenues, without tax to raise revenues then you are forced to put in place exceptionally harsh cuts not just for medicare beneficiaries but for medicaid. remember, this country, this great nation with our great resources today one in eight americans 40% of americans born
i know the republican leadership says that it s just not true. chris: the cbo the head of the nonpartisan congressional budget office says we can t score a speech. let s do it your way, okay? the republican plan that passed the house of representatives. and republicans voted for in the senate would, in the estimate of the cbo require beneficiaries of medicare to pay $6,500 a year more. $6,500 more in medicare benefits than they do today and why are they doing that? they are doing that because they want to preserve i don t think the speaker just says this but they wants want to preserve tax cuts that benefit americans they can t afford and they demonstrate in their plans and i give them credit for. this if you try to balance our budget without revenues, without tax to raise revenues then you are forced to put in place exceptionally harsh cuts not just for medicare beneficiaries but for medicaid.
junior attended in order to get info on an opponent. th that s politics. i talk to trump supporter, those i met on the road during the campaign, and talked to them again now. there are a lot of things about this president they like. they like the disruptive nature of what he s doing, the changes he s trying to put in place, the rolling back of regulation, one item they hope to highlight this week, but they get frustrated on his tweets specifically as they are off topic, seemingly personally motivated by hi own feuds and not by the larger topics that benefit americans. on the legal front, we saw jay sokolow, trying his best to change the subject also. but ty cobb now is not just going to be an outside lawyer. he s also going to be on the white house staff? that seems a bit unusual. reporter: yeah. that was unusual, the statement itself by the white house was striking as we received it toward the end of last week. ty cobb is a veteran d.c.