done, republicans have been making it up as they go along. the process here was ugly, people are just getting a glimpse of this discussion draf draft. there s a lot that needs to be discussed in the coming days. we will see if mitch mcconnell can do this. it certainly hasn t been the kind of process that one might of hope republicans would engage in, particularly given the way that they criticized the way obama hair was crafted. bill: it will be high drama all weekend. now on top two, the comey matters, is it behind us now? i think it s behind us to a certain extent because it cleared or attempted to clear up what his tweet meant 41 days ag ago. as john roberts pointed out, this led to the appointment of the special prosecutor he believes what james comey said in his senate testimony. the president and his fox & friends interview did a couple different things that
welcome back. the story you re about to see is not strictly speaking a good news story. it may, however, be the best story you see in a very long time. for weeks, erika brannock wondered who helped save her life as she lay badly wounded near the boston marathon finish line. on that terrible, terrible day. who was her anonymous hero? with your help last night we identified and located her. today, survivor and savior met. here s randi kaye with a 360 follow-up. reporter: this is what someone looks like waiting to meet the person, a stranger, who saved their life. i told my cousin last night that it s kind of like the night before christmas, where you re so excited but nervous at the same time, and you can t sleep. reporter: her name is erika brannock. just two days ag she left a hospital in boston, the last
that s average, what about the people waiting 1,000 days. i ve been hearing all week on twitter about people waiting 1,000 days, 1,200 days. i talked to a woman whose son was 100% disability, marine, came out of helmand and he was waiting for more than two years. and at one point they found out the v.a. in cleveland had lost his paperwork. i mean only because she kept on pressing the. i bump into people like this all over the country who can t do this. and there s bipartisan support, right? both parties agree this is a problem. we met with the chairman of the senate committee and house committee. they re both laser focused on this, but we need the president to act. call the white house, call your congressman, call your senator and tell them and the v.a. backlog. we need movement. we re grateful you re taking up the cause. i think the minute people hear the numbers, the average wait time 273 days, and that s a low number considering some of the