races. that s where the president was here today. we have to bring it home. less than 100 hours until the most important election of our lifetime. with of to get out and vote. this is indeed the election of our lifetime. people waited five hours to get in here. the energy is electric. that will translate into turnout. you were the former energy secretary of the united states. the president was talking about how there were more jobs created in the last 21 days of his administration compared first 20 months of this administration. donald trump has a job s report that says employment rate staying the same. if we had a 5% unemployment rate we would have been excited about that. why a meaning their wage were higher. why are we not seeing that?
expensive. if you had cancer they might not give you insurance. just being a woman was considered a preexisting condition because they would charge women more than men for insurance. which, when you think about it, makes absolutely no sense because the condition women have is the power to give birth to us. and it seems to me you wouldn t want to charge somebody more for bringing us into the world. that s just my opinion. so we put in a law that says, no, you got to charge women the same at men. you can t discriminate based on preexisting conditions. and okay. that s great. so, and by the way, on that vote, not a single republican
to call the balls and the strikes. they are supposed to say what the law is, not what the law ought to be. we just disagree. now, that s why god made congress. let s go vote. here s where we are. let s go vote. we ve done everything we can do. i know we ve got the last minute secret allegation, but there s nothing we can do about that. kavanaugh s been through six, not four, not five, six fbi background checks. none of the stuff has ever come up before. let s go vote. chris: senator, i got about a minute left. i m going to ask you i m going to invoke cloture here. i want to switch subjects with you and ask you about paul manafort s decision to take a plea deal and agree to cooperate with the special counsel. your thoughts on how big a deal this conceivably could be? you know, all of this is just speculation. i can speculate as well as anybody else, but none of us know, chris. here s what i do know, i do know
to call the balls and the strikes. they are supposed to say what the law is, not what the law ought to be. we just disagree. now, that s why god made congress. let s go vote. here s where we are. let s go vote. we ve done everything we can do. i know we ve got the last minute secret allegation, but there s nothing we can do about that. kavanaugh s been through six, not four, not five, six fbi background checks. none of the stuff has ever come up before. let s go vote. chris: senator, i got about a minute left. i m going to ask you i m going to invoke cloture here. i want to switch subjects with you and ask you about paul manafort s decision to take a plea deal and agree to cooperate with the special counsel. your thoughts on how big a deal this conceivably could be? you know, all of this is just speculation. i can speculate as well as anybody else, but none of us know, chris. here s what i do know, i do know
balls and the strikes, they re supposed to say what the law is, not what the law ought to be. we just disagree. now, that s why god made congress. let s go vote. here s where we are. let s go vote. we ve done everything we can do the. i know we have got the last minute, secret allegation, but there s nothing we can do about that. kavanaugh s been through six not four, not five, six fbi background checks. none of this stuff has ever come up before. $of3 chris:a here. i want to switch subjects with you and ask you about paul manafort s decision to take a plea deal and agree to cooperate with the special counsel. your thoughts on how big a deal this conceivably could be. i, you know, all of this is just speculation. anybody else but none of us know, chris. here s what i do know, i do know