perfectly, like someone who was in theater and no one looked away. no one did anything except listen. that s you know, that show and tell way, if i just might add, show and tell from first grade, she mostly showed. every example was pitch perfect and you know, many of them just indelible like her father struggling to work each morning so they could go to college. senator, margaret makes a really good point which is the narrative arc of it. there was a moment i think towards the three-quarter mark where she almost had a sort of preacherly cadence to what she was saying. we talked a lot about her husband being one of the most sort of eloquent and skillful orators of the 21st century. michelle obama came up there last night and gave her husband a run for the money. e.j. dionne has a really good assessment, saying it was a speech that was thoroughly apolitical on the surface but carried multiple political messages, linking a very traditional message about parenting with a call for
he s like at 34% with white guys who didn t go to college and that s a tough thing to compensate for. sure, but that s probably explained some of the doubling down among base groups like h hispanics and african-americans and white women and single women, who have to make up that gap unless mormons for obama come out in numbers that are unprecedented and thus far, undocumented. unfortunately, we have to leave it there. thank you to joel stein. we will see you soon, my friend. thank you to senator bill bradley for your wisdom, expertise and perspective, as always. great to have you on set. coming up, selling it. after months of being bashful, last night democrats stepped up to the mike on health care. we look at one of the president s signature laws and its place in the party platform when dr. zeke emanuel joins us ahead on now. look! she wears the scarlet markings!
his name is mitt romney, and you should really get to know him. little smooch. that was unexpected. nobody knew that romney was actually going to come on stage and greet her afterward. i m glad it wasn t another al and tipper moment. kept the kiss clean and short. didn t see any tongue there. appreciated that. interesting speeches. one to reach out to women. two, trying to emphasize, working class roots. christie talking about his family. ann reminding the crowd she is the granddaughter of a welsh coal minor. coal miner. mitt s dad didn t graduate. didn t go to college. started with nothing. the message was clear. paul ryan tonight and the man
and do an unpaid internship. but there are kids like me that worked themselves through college and put money while they went to college and took those savings and put them into an opportunity to do an unpaid internship. to say that some students have advantage of parental support that we shouldn t let them have any opportunities at all. is lobbying young people to follow their dreams. john: a lot of interns i am learning much more from you than i learned in college i don t have to pay you. how many learn more in your internships than you did in college. it doesn t say much for college but unpaid internship a great deal. i m not denying unpaid internships can be educational.
and even proposed cutting he wanted to cut for vocationals. it is more important to buy a new car than sit at home and not do that. i wholeheartedly agree that there is a major push from washingtone . go to college. go to a four-year university. take out the student loans if you have to.ke but why aren t we saying there is another route? in fact, the ceo of that company that i went out to visit in pennsylvania, and he was a vocational school kid. he has risen to the top of the company. he did attend college. he ended up going back and getting a higher education. he makes over $10 million a year. theoo department of labor says they predict job openings for the future. they assume maybe 14% employment growth overall, but electricians, they say, 23%. plumbers and pipe fitters,