flat. my production, after all the hype, after a bright lights, all of it has faded, after we have heard from the left about the kavanaugh takedown effort, all of it, this production will close out of town, a total flop. despite health hysteria, kavanaugh will finally get the featured role he deserves, and he s prepared for it his entire life. a seed of the supreme court of united states. i have two words. life tenure. that s the angle. joining me now, onside, gail trotter, spokesperson for the judicial crisis network ansonia, president of the national organization of women s new york city chapter. great to have you both on tonight. i want to start with you, sonja. we have seen these late in the game dried by hits on kavanaugh s character and reputation, so is it not fair to inquire, as politico did
procedures to ensure we have a safe planned shut down of the nuclear unit itself. we ll monitor weather conditions and shut the plants down as appropriate within two hours of when if storm is expected to make impact. we will continue to have personnel onside and continue to monitor wind and water conditions as well as the weather forecast and certainly work closely with nuclear regulatory commission, local and state officials as well. our plants are very safe. we ve got well-trained personnel. they re well-designed and we certainly have multiple backup systems in place as well. shepard: if you look across the grid, the serious concern is about this saturated ground that you already have, add a bunch of water, wind that comes one way and then another, that s not good for a light pole. that s right. we are expecting widespread power outages. if this storm comes ashore as a
had this sort of a conflict with canada. we do have one or two legitimate complaints. shepard: we have dairy. the wood. yeah. the tpp, the trans pacific partnership, would have negotiated away a lot of those dairy barriers. at the same time, it would have accomplished what i was talking about, bringing japan, australia, countries like that onside in a large free trading area that would have put us in a better negotiating position. shepard: this is not remotely related to conservativisconserv. obviously not. shepard: good luck. thanks for coming by. i appreciate it. my pleasure. shepard: the press pressing was supposed to begin ten minutes ago. when that starts, we ll bring it to you. the president heading to south carolina in a number of
character would hate them. and mine would certainly hate me. just as if i was at a time like you ask yourself what would i have done back then and but you don t have an answer with your life you can come close to announce that through the novel certainly through the situations that your characters get themselves into through their actions and development and we can all. be untrue but you ll probably never find an onside and. this is a maybe so not necessary. but it s good if some readers think about it his own and only as of and and ask themselves the same questions that we do you know i mean what would i have done back then i said it and i was going to. leave the best way to understand writers is through their books this meeting was very nice but the book reveals all that soon evil.
how do republicans particularly to hugh hewitt s note earlier, you have murkowski and shelley moore capito, a constituency of women who don t some of the things of what this bill will do to planned parenthood and others. how do you get on the moderates onside? for seven years it was very easy for republicans to say look, we don t like affordable care act. when you come to finding the replacements there are more differences than we previously anticipated. the answer for mitch mcconnell, at least as it comes to this week, is let s just short debate on something. the argument he s making is we cannot have this argument about substance unless get to the argument first on a bill. presumably that s either the house passed bill or the most recent iteration of the senate bill. but mitch mcconnell s point is let s not get this bollixed up