resident trumps epa administrator was slammed less than a month for replacing half the members of the scientific council. this is completely apart of the multifaceted effort to get science out of the way of the deregulation agenda, said one critic. it turns out, most of the academics who sit on the epa s board or not the objective scientists were led to believe. there more citizens of the swamp. twenty-four of the 26 members of the epa clean air advisory panel received epa grants around $190 million. seventeen of 20 advisors of the ozone panel put $192 million in grants. not only did they get paid taxpayer money to lobby for more taxpayer spending, they sit on the government panel appear review their own research. bear in mind, this is the same swampy epa than a 2015 under president obama violated federal law when it was engaged in quote
else s too. for so many americans that the reality is gloomy. it s a struggle to find work and if you have a job it is a struggle to live on what you are. that is what d.c. should be focused on, as we will be on the show. in ancient, the elite distracted the people with bread and circuses. in today s decadent d.c. presiding over economic failure, they cannot even get the bread part right. it is all just a circus. let s get into all of that. joining me tonight is our panel, former nevada assembly member and bernie sanders supporter, lucy political senior brightest a playbook, that s what you need to read every morning, jake sherman. and of course, we are so excited she has come all of the way across the country to be with us tonight, kimberly.
responsibilities oversight and also legislated. the problems in getting trumps agenda through have nothing to do with the russia issue. has to do with the fundamental interparty. that s a good point and we will get into that in the show as we get into those issues. they can t let go of it. we have to take a break but later this week s swap watch. the target on the green lobby, we expose the cronyism among people who put the environment first. that s head. next, is a populist movement take a big hit in the u.k. this week? what is it mean for the u.s. i have a surprising story for the panel. the next revolution is underway. stick around. did you know slow internet
most everybody. steve: i have some thoughts to share at the end of the show of what we can do to bring that about. i want to see if our panel has thoughts or questions. washington is notoriously slow to adapt to any change in the economy and basically anything, i wonder if you can give us specifics about what washington could do to facilitate some of the changes in our economy and workforce. it starts with recognizing the issue. we are creating enormous amounts of wealth. there s more wealth in our country than ever before in history. thus a good news. the more capabilities we have to understand that there s fundamental changes going on in the big picture is to think about how we can embrace the future. we cannot hold back this change
steve: i have some thoughts to share at the end of the show of what we can do to bring that about. i want to see if our panel has thoughts or questions. washington is notoriously slow to adapt to any change in the economy and basically anything, i wonder if you can give us specifics about what washington could do to facilitate some of the changes in our economy and workforce. it starts with recognizing the issue. we are creating enormous amounts of wealth. there s more wealth in our country than ever before in history. thus a good news. the more capabilities we have to understand that there s fundamental changes going on in the big picture is to think about how we can embrace the future. we cannot hold back this change