he s happy with it, gets the tv time, and part of the strategy. that s what he wants. he ll pay the price at the ballot box next year. i get a feeling we ll see puerto rico s and mitch mcconnell s overly flattering words used absolutely. that montage at the white house today with all ofs smiling faces and the back slapping, the hand holding over taxes, yeah. that s good commercial. that s going to play into a broader narrative about the party and its lack of interest to the typical american voter, but to your point, ruth, about those folks who are on s.n.a.p. and c.h.i.p. programs, that s not our voters, in fact they are. look where the legislation hits the hardest, whether the medicare aspects of it or the health care aspects of it, the tax aspects, it s all of those folks last time i checked s.n.a.p., red districts with s.n.a.p.
quote: cms has extensive experience building and operating technology systems that handle sensitive data. this experience comes from many years administering the medicare, medicaid and chip programs. one analyst we talked to predicts they will gdone. you know, cms has some of the smartest data geeks on, in the country working on it. furiously. and, i mean, every indication is that they re going to be ready to go october 1 nationwide. and i haven t seen anything really convincing, concrete that says that s not going to happen. reporter: there will be a lot of private, personal information in there, and security must be tight. jamie? jamie: agreed. thanks, mike, so much. good to see you. bill: quickly, there is a diplomatic riff growing between the united states and russia. president obama has canceled a meeting in moscow next month
passed along to the consumers, and not only that but the tobacco companies are also the ones who are supporting our schip programs as well. so, at this point they are paying for it as a result. so, until, you know trillions of people are not dying as a result. exactly. the point is that is a confluence of public pressure, public health campaigns, regulation and all sort of state regulation. mark, i want to sort of give you the last word on this issue about regulation. you did. you ll have to write another column and we ll have you back on the show. this is what you do for a living. you have too much knowledge. okay. what s the question? the question the question is about where how we start thinking about regulating this industry in a way that gets us to the middle place. that s what i think is interesting, because, you re right, we have the two polls either eating things wrong or buying the $9 tomato.
bill we assume that s the basic bill. there s so many things that help in reducing costs, our ability to purchase pharmaceuticals in bulk. medicare part d claw back. increased money for chip programs. so many things help us, the enhanced map in the budget that in ten years, pennsylvania gains money. we don t lose money because of healthcare legislation, we gain money. i dare say if governor otter sat down and went through the bill at length neil: do you buy anything when someone tells you ten years out? sure. because i can read the bill. and i ve neil: but this bill and the price has changed rapidly. we just had a case this week, as you know, of a jobs bill that went from 15 billion one day when voted on to signed off the next day at $18 billion in one