i did some very important things it gets rid of the individual mandate and get all the taxes and regulations, it does not allow buying insurance across state lines, maybe they can fit that. i can t even keep track. it s very important to get that. it takes away the power of thert federal government it makes its database they have flexibility with medicare and things like that, there s a lot of good things in the bill and they will probably make it a little bit better in the senate. i m not saying this isn t a win today, obviously it is. the freedom caucus has been validated by the fact that they can bring moderates to the other side they played a game of chicken with moderates, were not going on this bill and moderates this isn t going to be final. the same fight we just saw between moderates of the freedom caucus, the exact same thing is good to happen in the senate, i look forward to seeing president trump put pressure on that one way or the other who would get in the way of gett
become involved in political activity, can t endorse the candidates. this doesn t undo that. jesse: i don t know if itpe completely doesn t undo it. what i think happened here is these people who supported o donald trump on the religious right, they have a very noblean and genuine feelings about the government s role and how it should not be so intrusive in the church s life. do i feel that president trump is the most devout christian president we ve ever had? absently not. i don t want to see the president gets bogged down andee dragged into these social issue fights on abortion and on gay rights because he s not a traditional republican politician. he s not an ideologue. what i think what happened here is people came, let s get the president out there and doe something, he does it, signed the executive order, it might get tied up for a while, of course who knows. it s a good thing, we want a president who respects christianity and religion, i don t sp know if the president s hearts
it seems to be a little bit of a reach to see that you are going to rebuild yourself by stepping on trump and the russians. there is probably a faster lane to get there. tucker: it seems that way. is there a single voter who voted for trump or set up this election who is thinking, vladimir putin hacked the election? i am voting democrat next time? why didn t people who voted democrat for generations vote democrat in this election? there s always something about presidential campaigns. you want to justify what you have done if you lose. it wasn t just us, it was not our strategy or candidate, thert are forces out there that we cannot deal with. in some cases, that is true. the economy and other things but when you start putting togethers an international intrigue, worthy of a bad book, you are reaching just too far. i don t think every voter would make that connection anyway.
grousing on press corps that the sean spicer was not keeping them forward on how many executive orders president trump might sign. i would say look, president viewing the parade and going to balls, not in constant contact. sean taking a couple shots at white house reporters. we ll see that first full week. shannon: there was dust-up,thert suggesting that the bus of martin luther king,, jr. had ben removed from the white house. that turned out not to be true. sikh miller apologized. white house aide confirms mlk bust is still there. looked for it in the oval, i apologize to my colleagues. nice public apology. thanks to the white house chief of staff wonderful picture of mlk bust in the oval, in parentheses, read underneath the lines, what he is saying. get the facts first, tweet second. social media explodes. fake news, fake news.
data. one child is killed in chicago every week on average. that s a figure that s been true for the past quarter century. why is chicago so deadly? officers are under attack. reporter: in an interview with 60 minutes, former chicago police superintendent gary mccarthy says chicago cops are not actively policing out of fear of putting themselves and their families in jeopardy. police are on their heels. they re on their heels for a number of reasons. we see the results, don t we? we re reaching a state of lawlessness. reporter: of the 762 murders in 2016, 65% of the killings are happening in five districts on the south and west sides of the city. where 59 rival gangs fight each other for thert, police say. to curb the violence, more officers are being hired and gunshot detection technology allowing a faster response is being purchased but until the killings stop i feel scared in chicago.