wait until you re 65 to be able to use? that would be the green mountain state of vermont. where democratic governor signed into law a bill that will try to create the first statewide single payer health care system in the nation. they need to structure their financing for it. they need to get a federal waiver to try it out. they need a few years to get it up and running. with the bill that he signed into law yesterday, vermont has just started the process. wow. i know my job is to have sort of deeper analysis of things like this. i have to say look at those pictures of him signing the single payer bill into law, wow. vermont. dang. you did it. i m kind of psyched for you. [ female announcer ] you use the healing power of touch every day.
new orleans and baton rouge would be saved. also mirroring arizona, the second state with some stiff immigration laws. the governor nathan beale signed that law yesterday. the author will be here with me in the studio live and also someone who s against it. you want to hear the conversation. also another conversation you ll be interested to hear, a rare interview with hank aaron, talking about baseball, how it s letting down the black community. also talking about who the real home run king should be. from the cnn center, this is your cnn saturday morning. glad you could spend part of your day here with us. it s 7:00 a.m. in morgan city, louisiana. all eyes on morgan city today. let s talk about this flooding, major flooding has swamped the upper mississippi and ohio river valley is now making aim at lower mississippi. later today the army corps of engineers could open the morganza spill way in louisiana. it has not been opened in more than 40 years. w450i why would they
watching fairy god marry, and some end up with a job but 17 percent, one in five, we structurally need to address that. everyone want as job. nobody wants unemployment money, but getting a job is not that hard. there are three things you can legislate to get a job: one, is undo the health care job and remove the uncertainty from those hiring who do not know what they will have to pay. two, have permanent low taxes. three, make unemployment law lester filing to employers. they are afraid they will be litigated. creating jobs is not magic. you make employers want to employ people. and know the government will not be on their back. that is not the situation that is offered in the current legislation. that is the problem. alisyn: but the president has signed this into law yesterday, will that release some uncertainty? will people hire? guest: it is a temporary
that was signed into law yesterday. if our latest nbc wall street journal poll is any indication, they are both right. 59% of the americans agree with the tax agreement they ve worked out. 36% disapprove. only 23% say the president gave up too much in the tax deal. 10% say republicans gave up too much. good saturday morning to you, amy. good morning, alex. do you think everyone is a winner here, maybe? i do. i think that the president felt that the mandates from the elections was that both waters want i mean, the americans want both parties to work together. i think that s how he sees the mandate because he needs to win back the middle, independent voters he won in 08 and lost in 2010. but i would say for republicans, they do not see a mandate to work with the president from the
i m a politician. i m addicted to spending. hmm. that would be the day that monkeys fly out of my butt. it ain t going to happen. why? because this isn t a problem for them. there is yet another bail-out signed into law yesterday. this time, it was called the teacher bail-out. now i d give you the title of the bill, if it had one, i m not making this up. let me show you the actual title of the act. there it is. section one. it may be called the blank act of blank. who wouldn t vote for that? what? did the office of overt bill naming run out of fluffy bills title like affordable jobs for american loving americans going back to their work at their jobs and sick kids, too, act. i would have liked to vote