so you re going to have at least as diverse as nancy pelosi is, probably heading forward for the democrats. of course, mark, she isn t in so many other ways, right? because she s the leadership here is much older, right? she s going to be 79 in march. that does not reflect what we saw among the wave that is coming in here, right? she s not reflective of that. at all. no, but congress as a whole is not reflective of that at all and this is one of those turning points, i think, that we ll see the congress change. but just worth noting, and marcia fudge might have made the argument for nancy pelosi to become speaker again. nancy pelosi made history when she came in and became the first woman speaker. marcia fudge correctly noted she was the speaker when democrats lost the majority. nancy pelosi does not want to go down in history as the speaker who lost the majority twice and going into 2020, when you have 20-plus democrats seriously thinking of running for president, house democrat
lose here? is it jeb bush? is it chris christie? who has the most to lose? well, when you look at the actual issues that he believes in laying within the republican field that he isn t in. probably the more conservative candidates at this point that really can t get oxygen when they re talking about issues like immigration that he s really resonating with voters. maybe even, you know, ben carson who s been doing pretty well in iowa, et cetera. however, you also have republican candidates like jeb bush who had been the front runner, who isn t getting as much attention. actually now is using trump as a bit of a foil. listen to what he said today. from a republican party perspective, we have to be big and bold, not devicive and angry. we to be hopeful and optimistic, not deeply pessimistic. we re never going to win if