the wall street community fears that another .75 hike next month and more after that. the inflationary environment gets disturbance turning here after four straight weeks of advances that were stopped last week. not a great start to this week. more on that in just a minute. now there s this. say it ant so, joe? bill clinton s treasury secretary warned president biden against extending the moratorium on student loan payments. larry summers says inflation will get worse for everybody else because of it. hillary vaughn on why the administration seems to be hinting in this case. no, he s not. why our professor tells us, oh, yes he is. welcome. i m neil cavuto. i want to go to hillary vaughn on what could be coming in days. hillary, what are you hearing? president biden is keeping everyone in suspense, especially those that owe student loans. he says he will make his decision known before september 1 when payments restart. students are on edge waiting to see if they need to star
[applause] greg: yes, yes, yes! happy monday, everybody. you look fantastic. lying. so let s talk about chauvin. you remember the minneapolis cop convicted of killing george floyd. chauvin was just stabbed in federal prison. likely by some inmate wanting to gain street credit. what an eerie coincidence that chauvin gets stabbed just as a new documentary examines his arrest and prosecution comes out. and the documentary makes some amazing claims. if they are accurate, could expose a pretty big lie. a lie that cost lives including black ones, and billions of dollars in damages. it s at the heart of the breakdown of law and order and the reason why drugstore dee edrant is locked up. let s do a quick recap of the facts in case you re in a coma or joe scarborough. in 2020 floyd tried to pass counterfeit bills at a grocery store while null of enough drugs to make charlie sheen drool. thank to the fake money, they called the cops. that s it. after that our view of the case was
three today, and i look at those polls am i wrong in believing that probably every one of those races the power in the senate will be determined by tens of thousands of votes and not hundreds of thousands? you re right. that s the way the elections have been going and that s why her called swing states. they sit on the razor s edge. it depends on turnout and motivation and what i call investing in the nonsexy part of politics. everybody sees the ads, the rallies, the campaign, the candidate direct appeals, the tv interviews. what they don t see is who is investing in data and digital. how many volunteers you have, how many voter contacts have you made. i don t know what the dnc is doing, but the rnc has done a gait job on this. they raised over $300 million and spent it. they have over 100 million voter contacts. think about that. you re calling voters and you re the party talking about inflation, crime, education, immigration, border security,
needle a little bit to get there. five or six seats would give them a majority at this point. there s more democrats in that in districts that trump won two years ago. republicans are well-positioned to still get that majority in the house, which will end biden s ability to do anything legislatively. the senate, as we talked about, it s different beast. you have weak candidates that are struggling against their much stronger democratic opponents in key states. but i think it s republicans race to lose still when it comes to the house. neil: you think they have gotten cocky? they thought it was all baked into the cake and all of a sudden the cake doesn t look like it was? well, certainly possible. republicans were sort of riding on the island that this was an inevitable conclusion in november. they haven t necessarily done a gait job of defining the inflation reduction act, for example, and telling americans why they should oppose that. they haven t done a good job
employment status, and where are you and, the three types of people out there, billie, those seeking employment who don t have a job, those are the unemployment and the discouraged workers who have want a job and looked for a job the last 12 months and gave up because they feel there is no way to gait job and they are not counted, and then there is the marginally employed, those people are technically underemployed, bill and that comes from, if you are used to working, the 40-hour week and for some reason your employer says, you know what, we ll give you 25 hours this week or 30 hours this, week, those are the under employed and unfortunately the number has gone up and up and up and sitting now 16.8%, 26 million people. bill: and how many million americans. just under 26 million americans are underemployed. bill: you are looking for a job, six months down the road, and, man when will i work again, that is when you fall into the discouraged category and you say, there is a group tha