a pennsylvania republican tim murphy, co-chair of the house doctor s caucus back with us. good morning to you again. thank you for going on standby. your reaction as you hear it now? i think that this points to the concerns we ve had with regard to congress needs to act, the house and senate on some comprehensive immigration reform. arizona passed this law because they were saying the federal government wasn t enforcing the law, and they needed a number of clarifications. what this tells us is even the supreme court says it still need to be clarified and that s why they are sending this back to the ninth circuit. with regard to whether or not a police officer can with reasonable cause ask about the immigration status, apparently that part is going to remain, but they still want the courts to rule on this and i m sure that more suits and challenges will be out there. with the issue with regard to employment of immigrants, apparently that has been struck, and so illegal immigrants can
they say the ninth circuit should not have even joined it without discovering more about how it would actually play out. for now this case goes back to the ninth circuit with that one piece still in play but the other three struck down. bill: the ninth circuit is san francisco, right. it s based on the west coast. there are several sittings, that is one of the sittings that includes arizona. bill: this applies direction to section 6 if i have it right. and section 6 authorizes state and local police, as you ve been describing, to arrest immigrants without a warrant if they have probable cause to believe they ve committed a crime. that could be robbery is that a fair i m sorry to interrupt you, actually that is one of the sections that was struck down. the one upheld is section 2b, which allows them if they stop someone, have a reasonable suspicion about their status in this country, to determine, go through with determining their illegal immigration status or legal immigration
minds is the economy. time spent on this is time that isn t spent on the economy. if i m northward i want to be talking about the economy, not operation fast & furious. americans already think washington is dysfunctional. they already think it many partisan politics. so they are coming into it with that viewpoint. bill: what about the charge that issa says i have to figure out why the justice department quote-unquote lied about the operation. is that not legitimate? at the end of the date justice department sent a letter that denied they now about the program or denied the program. it s from the atf. then they provided all this information saying we were wrong. here is all the information. is a was pretty transparent. this has nothing to do with getting to bottom of why it
so-called generic ballot where people asked whether they plan to vote for a republican or democrat. the democrats are in very poor shape as well. they are considered complicit in all of this obama policies, which a great many people see as having failed. so that s the lay of the land. but it is not all roses for the republicans, who have some things to overcome, particularly congressional republicans. bill: thank you. be on standby, will you? we may get it this hour. we ll bring you back if we do. brit hume in washington. jamie: president obama not the only one in a big stake in the big decision set to come down from the supreme court. governor romney has one too. and chief political correspondent carl cameron traveling with the republican nominee for president. carl, good morning to you, good to see you. reporter: hi,. jamie: me, the gallop poll has says the economy and jobs are number one.
moments, because electronic devices are still forbidden inside the courts. now if you remember during the healthcare debate back in march there were audio tapes released of the question-and-answer back and forth between the justices and the lawyers defending each side, but that was released several hours after the case was argued. it was similar during bush v gore in the fall of 2000. but then again those audio tapes were only audio tapes, and there were no other transmissions inside the court. so that is a rule that still applies today. shannon bream now, our u.s. supreme court reporter is on the steps of the court to give us the decision on senate bill 1070, and the supremes have decided what, shannon, what is the shoes. part of this bill is going to be struck down for now. part of it looks like will be upheld. there were four different section tph-s play. there are three sections that this court has found in hen opinion by justice kennedy are preempted by federal immigration