sandra: voters hammering diane feinstein in san francisco. voters demanding she take more forceful action to oppose the trump administration. republican senator tom cotton also under fire with voters coming at him on a wide range of topics including the repeal of . i disagree that if we repeal the affordable care act that that s gonna happen. you know, part of my problems with the bill that was introduced into congress last month though is that it could have had that result and it was moving too fast. i didn t think it got it right. it was better to slow down and get it right rather than to get it fast. sandra: simon rosenburg president and founder of the new democratic network and former clinton campaign adviser. adam sigfried is here. adam, senator feinstein, not going after trump enough, tom
continue to have it, with the president support that type of legislation? if he did, would that go back on his promise to have a full repeal? i think first and foremost let s get back to his goal. we are working with congress. some of those conversations started a last night. staff has been working on a plan to repeal and replace. his goal first and foremost is to make sure we give the american people a health care system that s affordable, more accessible, more doctors, more plans. that s his goal. how a state chooses to implement that i think right now the idea we have had these mandates requiring people to get things it has driven out competition and driven up cost is not a health care system he is pleased with and wants to support the repeal of. kristen. sean, thank you. i want to be clear about this investigation because it seems like you potentially opened the door for one? which investigation are you referring to. possibly equity having this voter fraud? i did not, n
tyler moore. why did you take that away? that s the obvious one. please. you don t know the other two? rose marie. he falls over the ottoman. welcome back to morning joe. i m katty kay along with donny deutsch. mika and joe have the morning off. joining us on set, joy-ann reid. and in washington, kathleen parker. kathleen, good morning. hey, good morning. i m fired up and ready to go to georgia tech. in your capri pants, right? yeah. she s got the glasses for it and she s chosen the theme music. let s get to the news. the fight for control of the federal government, both in next year s midterm elections and in 1016 is beginning to take shape around a repeal of, yes, obama
their parents insurance until 26, stuff like that that is much more relatable for people than all the other stuff. i ve heard very valid arguments from both people that it s a win for the president or a win for republicans with the remainder of the law. i m not really sure where it is. don t you feel the politics are sort of baked in the cake already on this? this has already been a huge negative for him and really, a huge downdraft on the congressional side more than on the presidential side at this point in time. i think he s lost a lot of those independents from 08 based on this issue. i think what s left over now is a la carte. that s always been the paradox with this law, it polls really well in terms of the individual components i think that s right, but at the same time, you can put up a theoretical argument that let s say they strip down the individual mandate and the pre-existing condition provision, then all of a sudden the people are calling for repeal, are calling f
cindy jacobs. she says all those birds in arkansas may have died because of the repeal of, wait for it, don t ask, don t tell. that s right. gays serving openly in the military somehow equals massive avian fatalities. follow the logic? maybe because you re not a quote, unquote, respected prophet, as she says. it could be because we have said it s okay for people who commit these kind of acts to be recognized, you know, in our military for the first time in our history, there is a potential that there is something that actually happened in the land where 100,000 drum fish died and also where these birds just fell out of the air. now, there have been all kinds of theories about what killed the 5,000 birds in arkansas. people have talked about the end of the world, ufos, the government, you name it.