sell this within the conference that law which. there are serious impacts of that, though, and you bring up the idea of spending. some of this is the ability to wait 72 hours between the tidal is introduced, until the time that it s actually voted on. other than this, though, the rose committees with the gatekeeper to the house floor. this is how debt ceiling fights, and finding fights for one and lost, he can t do anything without putting it through rules, the fact they are putting more freedom caucus numbers there who don t want to continue funding to ukraine, we do want to do debt ceiling hikes, we do want to do larger omnibus spending bills. that is a key piece, here it s a future for these folks, not a bug. we re gonna return to, that because i think that s one of the most significant developments today, to the extent he gets over, this i love it, hi thank you mister crowned, i think we ll go back to, you join me now is congressman joe neguse, he s a member of in the 11th vote
you already have? because that s the other side of this equation. you have 203 votes! so, you would think you would have some negotiating leverage within the caucus itself using other caucus numbers to get that pressure to bare minimum 20. it s because something that i learned a very early in my tenure at the rnc with the emergence of the tea party. it s that for them and for a lot of the remnants of what is left inside the freedom caucus, jim jordan was part of that original class, uhm it s a two-pronged approach. one is respect, right? because they don t ever feel that they have been respected in the process by the process. and two, leverage. they ve never had leverage going into going into these efforts as we have seen the two times before with boehner and ryan. now they ve got both. they have gotten the attention of the establishment, right? [laughter]
so, you would think you would have some negotiating leverage within the caucus itself using other caucus numbers to get that pressure to bare minimum 20. it s because something that i learned a very early in my tenure at the rnc with the emergence of the tea party. it s that for them and for a lot of the remnants of what is left inside the freedom caucus, jim jordan was part of that original class, uhm it s a two-pronged approach. one is respect, right? because they don t ever feel that they have been respected in the process by the process. and to, leverage. they ve never had elaborate going into going into these efforts as we have seen the two times before with boehner and ryan. now they ve got both. they have gotten the attention of the establishment, right? [laughter] they both respect for the base, right? there are base voters out there
seats, including the most recent election. nancy pelosi is the reason that most of those democrats won because she by her leadership, and only by her leadership, got the aca passed without any republican votes. ed: but pardon me, she did such a great job, why are a rising number of democrats saying, no, we want a new face? when you consider what the caucus numbers are, i don t think 17 is a rising number. i understand the need for change but nancy pelosi was a great speaker and saved the country when she found the votes for atari, on the president past the tarp program. she saved the aca, and the aca was the reason that most of our candidates one. at the look of the democrats can t get her to 218, the votes to become speaker, we get the
that. now those leaders are trying to sell the plan, which keeps some popular provisions of obamacare in place. this is the legislative tax of that plan that we ran in 2016. tom price is now the secretary of hhs, the architect of it. 12 caucus numbers for the cosponsors of that bill as early as december. we are going for what i would call the typical growing pains of being an opposition party, fighting barack obama and nancy closely and harry reid to a governing party. i m really excited. a spill must talk about it with cory elaine, who served as communication advisor. he s a big fan of obamacare as it stands now. i have that right, don t i? you absolutely do.