cameras president. he said he was more relaxed without tv cameras when he was speaking with his interviewers. we will consider what president zelenskyy had to say in our first segment tonight and in our second segment tonight you will meet a member of the missouri house of representatives, ian mackay, and he represents a district in st. louis he believes he could never have gotten elected to in the missouri town where he grew up because of the strong anti-gay prejudice in that area. he brought his life experience to the floor of the missouri how is this weekend when he argued against the republican bill that could limit transgender participation in school sports, no one could possibly have written the speech that he delivered. that speech by ian mackey was something that did not have to be written. he did not have to write it himself because it just poured out of him in a controlled, righteous fury that is a painful and beautiful thing to be hold. it is, i guarantee you, the
that s a lot of what the discussion was tonight. talking about how we move into entitlement reform, tax reform, growth mechanisms. you know, what i think about my district in st. louis, missouri, i think about that single mother of two trying to make it to the 15th and 30th of the month and the business owner worried about health care and worried kpt changes aren t working or the costs are going up. i worry about the elderly couple that looks at the debt and wonders if the american dream will be there for their grandchildren. this is what s on their mind. i thought, again, very useful and productive conversation. this isn t about polls, this about governing and getting things done. congresswoman, you said the small group of house republicans didn t stop down the works but the government was shut down. people have been furloughed, 800,000 people aren t getting a
we re listening to constituents and doing the work that is important for us back home. we care a great deal what happens in the future and not shutting down the government and making sure the $17 trillion in debt is dealt with and we do big picture things and issues and that s a lot of what the discussion was tonight. talking about how we move into entitlement reform, tax reform, growth mechanisms. you know, what i think about my district in st. louis, missouri, i think about that single mother of two trying to make it to the 15th and 30th of the month and the business owner worried about health care and worried kpt changes aren t working or the costs are going up. i worry about the elderly couple that looks at the debt and wonders if the american dream will be there for their grandchildren. this is what s on their mind. i thought, again, very useful and productive conversation. this isn t about polls, this