Political and policy consequences if republicans win the house and or the senate. We have with us one of the founders of election watch. We will look for some of you after the fact. Im going to turn it over to chris who will introduce the panelists. A couple of pieces of business. We are going to have some presentations on big picture things, the house, the senate, governors, other things. We are going to turn to your questions. For those in the room, we will take your questions at the microphones. For those viewing from afar, we have a couple of ways you can pose questions. One is through emailing nate. Moore aei. Org. I will turn it to chris and we will begin. Chris of course, never tweet, as we know. [laughter] for your own sake. But we do look forward to have your questions. You are extraordinary lucky humans because i was thinking about this today. I do not think you could have a better group of experts then this lovely group of people. When hot takes are all around us, youre in f
I am john corti a, here with chris we welcome you to election watch at the American Enterprise institute rate as many of you know and maybe some of you have experienced, election watch is the longest running election Commentary Program in washington, d. C. Starting in 1982. We had continuity, some change with election watch over the years. We have one of the founders of election watch going back that far and maybe some of you in the audience have been to every session. We look for some of you after the fact. Im going to turn to the panelists and we will get going. A couple of pieces of business. We are going to have presentations as we always do on big picture things, the house, the senate, the governor. We will have conversation. We will turn to your questions. For those in the room, we will take questions in a microphone. For those of you viewing from afar, there are a few ways you can disclose questions. One is through emailing nate. Moore aei. Org. Or, twitter with the ae ielection
To the women instead of putting restrictions on abortion . You put restrictions on women. Let them decide on their own what they want to do with their pregnancies. [indiscernible conversations]. I am john corti a, here with chris we welcome you to election watch at the American Enterprise institute rate as many of you know and maybe some of you have experienced, election watch is the longest running election Commentary Program in washington, d. C. Starting in 1982. We had continuity, some change with election watch over the years. We have one of the founders of election watch going back that far and maybe some of you in the audience have been to every session. We look for some of you after the fact. Im going to turn to the panelists and we will get going. A couple of pieces of business. We are going to have presentations as we always do on big picture things, the house, the senate, the governor. We will have conversation. We will turn to your questions. For those in the room, we will t
While back, along with these television companies, supports cspan2 as a public service. Dr. Offit, and happy to be talking with you today trantwo the pleasure y is mine, thanks very much. Obviously the themes in your book are very relevant for what were going through today in the pandemic. And i know you said you startedd writing the book around the time the pandemic began, but can yu tell us when the idea for the book came from and why this book now . I think the emotion for this book actually came from the fact that i am a child of the 50s and i remember the polio epidemics. What i rememberme from that is e how devastating that pandemic or that early epidemic was, how much it affected my mother. We were not allowed to go to swim and a public pool. Me and my cousins with swimmingn dysplastic pools and the back. And so jonas salk made a polio vaccine animated by taking the virus growing get pure find it and inactivating it with the chemical. So you were inoculated with whole killed pol
Years ago to and when i left the post i thought it would be absolutely wonderful at that time i went to d i th editorialpageou conferences and provided research and if not this would be a great t way to live the rest of youred t life like going to School Every Day than i realizedaske t bright teen articles would be hard to make a living. Bo, i was asked to do my first spo in evert book the one that i thought onl. Only 12. This was back in 1978, and i thought this is fascinating. So i would go to every spa, state week and i would write a chapter about what they were really like inside. I thought, this is it. Its it sold 14 copies. My mother my mother bought 14 and that was it. But i remember when i went to one place, it was called the hot springs. I would arrive on sunday and stay for the whole week and put that in the chapter. I arrived, and the woman at the desk said sit down, please. Weve had a problem here. We have some writer coming from washington, d. C. And we just had a death in