but as always, the finer details reveal the true winners and losers of the gop s latest manufactured political crisis has a new york times writes, the president and his negotiators believe they worked out a deal that allowed republicans to claim big spending cuts, even as the reality was far more modest. joining me now is one of those negotiators, shalanda young, director of the office of management and budget director. welcome back to the sunday show. thank you, jonathan. let s put on the screen some of the provisions of the law. i know we did that in the introduction. imposes new caps on federal spending for two years, restarts the federal student loan repayments, new work requirements for food stamps, cuts 1.8 billion dollars in irs funding, rescinds 30 billion dollars of unspent covid funds. now, the president the speaker both said they didn t get everything they wanted. what didn t the white house came? look, we always said, if you have a true budget discussion, if
party, and brandon buck, msnbc political analyst who has worked with former house speaker s paulo ryan and john boehner. gentlemen, thank you both very much for coming back to the sunday show. brandon, this is your party. so let me start with you. my apologies, the allergies. magnolia trees are beautiful, but oh, they are wreaking havoc on me right now. there are already nine declared candidates with the least three more to jump in this week. do you think there are too many in the race who will split the no trump gop base vote, and all, trump will include victory for the nomination, the same way that he did in 2016? i m not worried about that today, i would be worried about it if we were six months from now, nine months from now, people are going to be starting to vote. e months fro i think ron desae clear alternative to donald trump. but no one is going to just give that to him, he asked her, that and that is healthy for our party, to have a process where somebody can establish t