owners happen to be hispanic, we need to go back to the core of the priority issues. not continue to see the rhetoric of one single issue that yes, needs fixing, it is not the top one. once again, we need to see this in elections. this is the thing that will be rattled around, it will not work. that is why president trump instead of the positive that he is getting, that is what the data is showing. tucker: it is though. i can t say this enough. it is the opposite of what i think every person i know in washington would have predicted a month ago. after all this drama we have the single most intense month politically i ve ever seen. in a life lived in washington. that he would be more popular. could he focus on that point. what he think that is about? we actually ran some data as
we will continue to hit the immigration pinata as i like to call it as an issue, it is not the one that is really driving the priority of hispanic americans. working hard for the american dream. also moving jobs in the economyn tucker: what do you make of the assumption. i think it is shared by pretty d much every cable news anchor. the assumption? i think it is shared by pretty if you have a hispanic last name, you are for illegal immigration. that strikes me as a prettyc patronizing at best. at best. i it definitely is a patronizing assumption. while many of us who like to be hispanic, we may know someone who is caught in the middle of a broken immigration system. or than 60% of hispanic americans are actually u.s.-born.am that is a fact that many people overlook. we want to work hard, we want do things the right way. most of the small business
withdraw from the nuclear deal if congress and the european allies don t fix it. the europeans have made clear they don t think the pact needs fixing and they believe it s working well. so in about three months, we will reach d-day when trump has promised to unilaterally withdraw if he can t get a tougher deal. now, were trump to unilaterally abrogate the accord, the iranians have several options. they could pull out themselves and ramp up their nuclear program, which means trump would then have to deal with another north korea, this time in the middle east, or iran could sideline the united states, keep adhering to the deal, and do business with the rest of the world. and they could make mischief in the middle east. the third arena where the white house has talked and acted tough without any follow-on strategy is pakistan. the administration has publicly branded that country a terrorist haven and suspended military aid on those grounds. this is entirely understandable. the pakistani m
that people some people like about obamacare. this, of course, comes after republicans in congress, they failed to make good on their promise for seven years to repeal and replace obamacare. joining me now is one person who helped craft obamacare, dr. zika emanuel, former obama white house health policy. thank you for coming in. good to be with you. thank you. so you helped craft obamacare. you also have been very consistent in saying that the law needs fixing. is what we re going to see today, is this the fix? no, this is terrible, actually. so there are three parts to the executive order as we understand it. one allows these so-called association health plans to operate across state borders, a second expands the opportunity for short-term health insurance the obama administration had three months as the limit that doesn t have to fully comply with the essential health benefits and other aspects of obamacare and the third is to change the health care
or at least it was until the last election. now democrats are under pressure from the left to oppose just about everything president donald trump touches, even ideas they themselves used to promote. let s bring in republican congressman jim jordan of ohio. thank you for being here. i want to circle back a little bit later in our conversation to talk about the politics of the democrats and where they are because some might argue no matter what you do, you got to go to the senate and who knows. i want to talk to you about the freedom caucus and where you stand on this tax proposal and what you like and what you think needs fixing. we support the outline in the framework that s been put forward. will it actually cut taxes? will it simple by the code and will it be conducive to producing economic growth? we think with the numbers that have been given it will do those things.