any expertise on the job e creation. look at california which is a haven for the kinds of policies that the president supports and for the first time since 2008, their unemployment rate is under 9% and that is six years, but the two industries that are credited for why they are growing jobs is education and health care which have nothing to do with the sorts of the green energy technology, so sit is not just conservative criticism here. i mean, you look at the headlines that we are seeing, chris, and the washington post headline today that it is bad news for the coal state democrats and the hill, and they have a headline in the last 448 hour, and obama s poll numbers may sink the democratic nominees nationwide and the atlantic, has world lost faith of obama and this is not coming from the steve deace or red day or news max, but from the mainstream liberal media, and that is to defend the national narrative against obama and this fall, and they are clearly on the defensive. thank you,
disaster or will they back the president all the way? coal state democrats came out in opposition. alison lundergan grimes is going to launch a campaign that criticized president obama s plans. and lawmakers including mark begich, kay hagan, and mary landrieu also expressed their concerns over this. however, a washington post /abc news poll show 70% of americans are in favor of the government limiting carbon emissions from power plants. it is decision day for voters in several states. much of the focus on republican circles is in mississippi. it s being called the nastiest race in the nation. tea party candidate chris mcdaniel is charging thad cochran who was first elected back in 1972. high profile republicans like sarah palin support mcdaniel. he tried to fire up his base by
coal state democrats up in 2014 in the senate to louisiana, arkansas, certainly west virginia, i think democrats kissed that good-bye. ofa and other groups that support the president say don t talk about those particular policies? i think it is going to be very tough. i think it will be hard. i think the president sees this as his legacy. he wanted to do this. this is a big deal to him. although i do think there are political risks for his party, you know, he wants to go ahead and do it. steve? i agree with mara. i think it makes it difficult for red state democrats. republicans will hit them and hard on this issue, should make them defend what the president is doing here. look, go back to what charles was saying, the president demonizing his opponents, people raised questions about this, mit scientists about the settled science, he can do that because he is proposing executive