blackburn, republican aaron schock and texas democrat beto o rourke. thank you for hanging out with us. if you were going to go to las vegas and bet, probably even odds about now, i think, for republicans to take over the senate, really good odds that they will continue to control the house. suppose for a minute there is an all-republican capitol hill and a democrat in the white house for his last two years. play that scenario out for me. what happens? nothing? are we in we saw it in the mid 90s with president clinton and republican house and senate. we saw them pass things like welfare-to-work in a bipartisan vote. it took a few presidential vetoes before they got it not too hot, not too cold but just right and so i think the question will really be for the president, does he want to negotiate with the legislative branch or does he want to continue as he has in going it alone and acting unilaterally in implementing laws certainly that the congress believes is unconstitutional, bu
evidence for a suit, has he made errors in dealing with congress? i don t know, and as you probably know, i m a freshman. i ve only been here for about 18 months. long enough to tell. in terms of the merits of the argument my understanding is that this president offered queuer executive actions than almost any other president preceding his presidency in recent history but furthermore and probably more importantly the veterans i represent in el paso want to us fix the va, those unemployed in el paso want us to work on the economy. people are asking what we re going to do about the humanitarian crisis on the texas/mexico border so that s what my constituents, most people in america want us to work on. i think the lawsuit is a waste of time and resource and focus when we have some very serious issues confronting this country. to my democratic colleagues do they believe the president is executing the laws to the