look at the red, white, and blue on the bridge. brian, you spend a lot of time there. is it always like that or is it just for memorial day? brian: no. i didn t even notice. i drove over there. there was a big memorial day sara outside of jaguar stadium they got the second biggest wall in the whole country commemorating all those who fought in northern florida lost their lives dating back to world war i. there is a huge thing there. i drove over the bridge. i didn t look at the side of the bridge. a bit of a surprise to me to see that. appropriate for this military oriented area. steve: sure. if you were approaching because brian is appearing live at a diner today live in the jacksonville area. had you arrived at work on a boat you would have seen it. ainsley: that s right. we are not suggesting that you pull over on the bridge and look over the edge to see if it s red, white, and blue, never a good idea, brian. brian: no, i probably wouldn t do that be in traffic i
and we cut about 55 to 57 billion of nondiscretionary or nondefense discretionary. second thing is, and this is the most overlooked element in this bill is the administrative pay go for presidential executive orders and executive rule making. with those two tools, the president s administration has gone completely around congress, grown this government by 1.5 trillion it. brian: through executive orders and rule making. brian: if he is going to do something show us what he is going to cut. if it hits the threshold of 100 million. brian: you are still a. i m a no. brian: why? i m a no at this point. i agree there are good measures in there. it doesn t go far enough. it takes us back to 22 on the nondefense spends. it needs to take us back to 19. 22 locks in big covid increases
but these executive orders, yes, they might be a counter balance to the fact that congress is less productive than we d often like them to be, but they don t face the scrutiny of a bill, of a legislative effort. they don t face that scrutiny. judicial review comes later and we know the travel ban situation is up and blocked. and some we don t know exactly how they are working. in other words, he did one order that said every new regulation you have to get rid of two, and then we looked in to it and we found out there are exceptions for national security foreign affairs and organizational executive rule making. so the order is not as big as it sounded. great to see you. in anticipation of the first 100 days of president trump being in office, we are talking to people all officer tver the and they are sharing their i impressions. chris jansing joining me. you have spoken with prominent political celebrity and community voices in los angeles. what did you hear? donald trump has
why still no plan to replace it? we have a plan to replace it. we have plenty of ideas to replace it. and you ll see as the weeks and months unfold what we re talk about replacing it, how we can get better choices with lower prices by not having the cost of government take over health care, which is causing all this problem in the first place. the key part is plenty of ideas for replacement. ideas are nice. but this is a law. it has over 2,000 pages of statutory text. that s a point republicans used to cite all the time. and we looked it up. it has another 10,000 pages now of executive rule making. you can t amend and replace with plenty of ideas. you have to write out your own plan, show people what they re voting on, and see if you have the support for it. congressional republicans know that, even if they want to pretend this is more simple. but does their incoming president know that? unclear. today as congress convened and these actual questions started piling up, trump showe