Paid. When you say cnn this morning with Kasie Hunt next its wednesday, september 11, right now on cnn this Morning Donald Trump was fired by 81 Million people well, she got zero votes. And when she ran, she was the first one to leave because she failed Donald Trump, Kamala Harris Facetoface on the Debate Stage for the first and possibly final time will show you what happened and people start leaving his rallies early out of exhaustion and boredom, people dont leave my Rallies Trump takes the bait. Kamala harris, under the former president s skin, putting him on the defensive and then theres this superstar endorsement. How Taylor Swift support for harris because a problem for trump 5 00 a. M. On the East Coast are live look at Capitol Hill on this Wednesday Morning good morning after the big debate. Good morning, everyone. Im Kasie Hunt. Its wonderful to have you with us the morning after the debate feeling very different for Democrats Today than it was back in june, i spent all of Las
president s proposal of capping deductions at 28%. i like that idea. i think that makes sense. can we get enough democrats to go along with that? i would hope we can. i don t think we can do it all with democrats. should we raise cared interest? i think we ought to eliminate the carried interest. it s earned income. it s not capital gain. capital gain is when you take money out of your pocket, you put it at risk. and you get a premium for putting your money at risk. specifics. i know, i know. if i get money from calpers, big pension program, and i invest it, what i m doing is providing a service. frankly, i m a lawyer. if i provide a service, i earn income, even if it s a contingen contingency, what do i pay? so i think there s a lot of things we can do. but we ought not to pretend you can do it for free. i was for the clinton rates. i m for the clinton rates today. now, i wouldn t phase in the clinton rates immediately because the economy s still trying to get back.
for mr. henry. and civilized my goodness, bob. it sounds worse than the negotiations on the hill. it s worse, thank goodness this wasn t our situation to try and strike a deal, it would be hopeless. if a deal is struck, how much will the deficit be redied, what kind of numbers are we talking about? it would be minuscule. where you d see the biggest short-term impact would be if you eliminate all of the bush tax rates and they go back to the clinton rates. the government would be bringing in more revenue, but that s going to take some time. that s not going to happen immediately and it s a relatively small amount in terms of what the government is spending every single day. that money would be spent pretty quickly. so, again, because we re now at this point where this is just a short-term deal, any of the major entitlement reforms that would actually bring major spending cuts are sngsly off the table right now. so, to answer your question directly without pointing a finger at
for mr. henry. and civilized my goodness, bob. it sounds worse than the negotiations on the hill. it s worse, thank goodness this wasn t our situation to try and strike a deal, it would be hopeless. if a deal is struck, how much will the deficit be redied, what kind of numbers are we talking about? it would be minuscule. where you d see the biggest short-term impact would be if you eliminate all of the bush tax rates and they go back to the clinton rates. the government would be bringing in more revenue, but that s going to take some time. that s not going to happen immediately and it s a relatively small amount in terms of what the government is spending every single day. that money would be spent pretty quickly. so, again, because we re now at this point where this is just a short-term deal, any of the major entitlement reforms that would actually bring major spending cuts are sngsly off the table right now. so, to answer your question directly without pointing a finger at
for mr. henry. and civilized my goodness, bob. it sounds worse than the negotiations on the hill. it s worse, thank goodness this wasn t our situation to try and strike a deal, it would be hopeless. if a deal is struck, how much will the deficit be redied, what kind of numbers are we talking about? it would be minuscule. where you d see the biggest short-term impact would be if you eliminate all of the bush tax rates and they go back to the clinton rates. the government would be bringing in more revenue, but that s going to take some time. that s not going to happen immediately and it s a relatively small amount in terms of what the government is spending every single day. that money would be spent pretty quickly. so, again, because we re now at this point where this is just a short-term deal, any of the major entitlement reforms that would actually bring major spending cuts are sngsly off the table right now. so, to answer your question directly without pointing a finger at