congress woman jackie walorski and two of her staffers, emma thompson and zach. all killed wednesday in a head-on collision in their indiana district. plus, the family of gabby potato, who was killed last year while on a cross-country road trip with her fiance, now working to reach other domestic violence victims. fox news sits down with her mom about with the foundation at her daughter s name is doing to try to help. we begin tonight with the president in isolation but certainly not immune to the latest controversies swirling around his administration. white house corresponding kevin corke is tracking the latest development tonight. good evening. good evening. as you can well imagine, the president is trying to stay busy despite covid buried today in fact he signed an executive order directing the department of health and human services to consider working with states to use medicaid waivers to pay for expenses for women who cross state lines to receive abortions. that exe
fiscal impact. it s is the official score of the inflation reduction act, that s what they call it, including savings from tax enforcement shows $305 billion in deficit reductions this decade, that includes deficit reduction in a possible 23 and a foster 24 which will help ease near-term inflationary pressures. so jason, how come mitch mcconnell says not a single republican is going to vote for it? because it spends hundreds of billions of dollars. it won t fight inflation despite its nifty title, and it raises taxes at time we don t have to have taxes raised. and i think you need to look at the wall street journal with the peace they put out today. it said hey, in the first four years, it adds to the deficit and supposedly the deficit reduction comes later in the, you know, seven, eight, nine, ten years down the road and kind of a wink and a nod to saying like yeah, that s really going to happen. nothing those things never come to fruition. feel jason, you ve been peeking at my
homeless and can t meant i m asked whether she would help to house and have a homeless buried she said yes, even gave her address but she s not happy about what happened next. time to strike up tonight lightning round jason rantz. all right. jason, where does this go from there? i love the story. you ve got a woman who was upset that an encampment that s clearly dangerous was being swept and someone was down there, a friend of mine, who was filming it for his work, and he realized that this woman was clearly acting out in an inappropriate way, getting upset for the wrong reasons, so he simply said okay, can they go to your house, you don t want them swept, you don t think they should go into shelters, and the come to your place. she says yes, gets out the address, and almost immediately within just a few hours she goes on facebook or one of her housemates goes on facebook to claim that she was doxed because the address went out. because the second that there s actually the threat of
congress in the house, so we need more millennials in the congress to stand up for our issues. with that being said, issue the right candidate to be president of united states? i think that s a little bit i m not sure about that one. i don t know if she would get my vote. shannon: both of you seem kind of united on the fact that you re not sure that she s actually the best next choice for the party. but we will see. again, the president says he s running. that is his plan. and i suspect he says he isn t, there will be a free-for-all within the democratic party and there s a lot of conversation about bringing in a younger, newer generation as capital continues to progress. here s the thing, i will tell you. i money is on my money s on gretchen whitmer, the governor of michigan, but hey. shannon: she s got a gubernatorial race to get there first. we will track that along with all the other hot midterm races. richard and jason, thank you both. thank you. good to see you, shann
what that wall street journal piece from editorial board. the headline says about that deficit reduction, even cbo says all the savings or five years out. sure they are. that s what they say. on wednesday the congressional budget office said the first four years through 2,026, it will increase the deficit by $22.2 billion. over ten years it would reduce the deficit by nearly $101.5 billion. those savings in the out years as congress likes to call the far end of the budget window, are almost certainly fictitious. richard. listen. i think we have to wait to see what happens. there s one part of this bill i disagree with jason where it goes directly the pockets of the american people and that has everything to do with decreasing the price of prescription drugs for seniors. as an issue that both democrats and republicans have debated for weeks, months, years on end, and finally in this bill you ll cap the price that seniors are paying for their insulin. some of the seniors are in my