glamping. fyi. inside politics better start right now. today on inside politics a big bet on new hampshire. nikki haley is crisscrossing the granite state making her case to as many voters as possible. stakes for the first primary are incredibly high but she s trying to keep expectations low. plus, chaos and bedlam, donald trump is warning that s what we can expect if the u.s. supreme court says states like colorado can rule that he s ineligible to run for. the for president. less time at the podium, more time ordering milkshakes, what to expect from president biden on the trail. we have new reporting on his campaign s attempt to highlight what they think is the president s best attribute, connecting with voters. i m dana bash. let s go behind the headlines and inside politics. we start in new hampshire where nikki haley is all over the map literally. she s holding six events in that state today and doing some tv interviews along the way. here s just part of h
insurance and my mot and stuff like that. but those savings aren t earning much interest. it s not looking good, obviously. the bank of england has increased the base interest rate 13 times in the last year and a half, but high street banks have been sluggish to pass that on to savers. mps have been asking the prime minister if that s good enough. it does what the chancellor said, it s the issue needs to be resolved. i know he s met recently with the fca and they ve agreed to deliver better deals for savers by driving competition and increasing reporting, which i think they re doing in the next few weeks in particular to make sure that savers are benefiting from higher interest rates. lenders have been quick to hike the interest they charge on mortgages. average rates for two year fixed deals are at 6.47%. and today, for the first time, five year rates passed 6%. but the amount they re dishing out to savers is only 2.45%. i want some bacon as well, i think, because we run out. that s n
interpreter called mohammed. they of course brought all the wrong people home. mr. president save me and my family please. thank you so much for coming on here all of this talking about the allies and was left behind.eo the majority of savings aren t allies. we are discussing actual ally. its pressure and we are picking the wrong people. tucker i m just going to tel you i don t think that he cares. that s the gravity of this whol thing.e the bureaucrats in washington for a i total of 50 years the o thing is improved in that time is his own bank count. and i know he does not care because nobody has been held accountable since the beginning
significant bill until we see the cost estimates from congressional budget office. policymakers shouldn t have to vote on the bill to see what the costs are. so the first step is let s get a score, let s analyze what the effects would be thing we can move forward in that. to the point you were just making, there are two reasons, health care effects tax reform in that we have to use the reconciliation instructions to get this done before we could move to health care. i ll also point out the savings from health care can t be applied to tax reform. tax reform has it be revenue neutral on its own. the savings aren t going to be close to $1 ftrillion. much, much less. the budget vehicles, budget reconciliation we re making makes the sequences health care has to be first. right. then we focus on tax reform. we have to pass a budget for next year, something we haven t next year, you re talking
retirement age for some workers. he also cut benefits and made adjustments to how much state employees pay into the plan. those savings aren t going to the workers. instead, retiree money is ending up in the hands of outside managers like private equity funds and hedge firms. the very same fund managers that were the biggest donors to chris christie s campaign. he has done some reporting on this. lee, good to have you with us tonight. you have just written a piece about christie s pension reform promises. what did you find. thank you for having me. as you mentioned, chris christie created big changes for the new jersey state pension fund and he likes to talk about getting tough on workers, cutting benefits, longer retirement age, that type of thing but the flip side of the new jersey pension story is that under his