to keep the government up and running let s stay till december. we have it at least until december. we have once again fighting on capitol hill on this will likely take us to the brink. i know that s shocking. we ll probably get down to the final vote at final hour. welcome on monday morning. to a brand new america s newsroom. i m martha maccallum, i m bill hemmer. one. main sticking points, $3.7 billion for people marks the federal emergency management agency running dry on disaster aid. as of now the government could run out of money by friday. come up with a proposal of your own that reduces the effect of additional spending. we can t borrow money every time something bad goes wrong in america. we agreed to their number on fema. do they want the government to shut down. this they want fema to close and fema will close. they have money to go through monday or tuesday if we re fortunate. bill: so threats of the real deal.
recession. reporter: certainly with jobs, certainly with jobs we are. bill: thank you, stephen, from the wall street journal stephen moore. martha: there is a religious rift brewing on the campus of an american university. why some proves are outraged at this new policy. bill: president obama telling the congressional black caucus to quote, stop complaining. put on your marching shoes, shake it off, stop complaining, stop grumbling, stop crying. we are going to press on. we ve got work to do. bill: now the son of a famous civil rights leader not exactly in the president s corner on that. we ll explain, details in only three minutes.
whichever one you prefer control over the other and think that gives the republicans control over the senate, instead of just bill: you think this is purely doable but the democrats in the senate are to blame and they re turning out saying guys like you are to blame and members of the tea party. what do you think about that? i think that the democrats are so desperate for a game changer, that they would be willing to shut things down, let the military not be paid, let those in emergency situations not get help, just so they can shut things down. we saw it in the spring, in the summer. they are anxious for a shut down. they think they politically win a shutdown. and what most of us that i know in the house were paying, look, let s keep our promise. we promised at least $100 billion in the first year. we didn t get anywhere near to that. so let s start cutting like we promised, and i think that the s&pes will be satisfied, i think that it gets us on the right track. but the senate,
we pre ticket. thank you, scott. bill: a fiery clash overt president s plan for creating jobs. heads of the republican and democratic parties facing off on national television and reviving this debate over who is to blame for the economic crisis. we ve had 18 straight months of job growth added 2.4 million jobs for the private sector month after month, past the american recovery and reinvestment act, saved the american automobile industry which ever republican candidate for president would have let go down the tube. it sounds like the new slogan is no longer hope and change, it s hey, it could have been worst. great bumper sticker debbie, i hope it works for you. the reality is that the americans are hurting in this country. bill: the debate lines are being drawn every day. steven morris a senior writer for the wall street journal is with us. great to be with us. bill: what he said continuously
years in prison, now back on u.s. soil and talking about their ordeal. shane bauer and josh fattal were held in near isolation and could hear the screams of other prisoners being beaten nearby. they were arrested on spying charges after iran accused them of crossing the border while hiking in iraq. bauer says they may not ever know if they crossed the border but the real reason for their imprisonment, he believes, is all toll ticks. this was never politics. this was never about crossing the border between rand iraq. we were held because of our nationality. bill: bauer and fattal were released last week after postinging a million dollars bail in tehran and now they re back on u.s. soil and new york city was their first stop. it was great to see those buildings, wasn t it? home again, baby. martha: it caught a lot of attention. those are just a few of the stories we re watching in america s newsroom right now. coming up we have a lot more for you, new york city s top cop saying i