one communication director to another, let our friend pat back in. let him do a briefing on economic nationalism. we ll talk more about that coming up. a major recall on swine flu vaccines. we ll tell you about that. and we ll tell you who times person of the year is, and iran says they test fired a new long-range missile. about the swine flu. little jack, our 18-month-old, who has had everything, born ten weeks early and just struggled. we went back and looked at the pictures the other day, heartbreaking to see how little and all of the wires. they get through that, and then gets salmonella in drinking water, we didn t realize that. and two weeks ago, we get him the swine flu vaccine and two days later he got swine flu. but he s okay? he s okay. he is the strongest he is the toughest baby ever. his name is jack, and we call him jack rabbit and now i call him the iron rabbit. he had swine flu. it is rough and scary. a little kid is having trouble breathi
chris: i m chris wallace and this is fox news sunday. the obama administration ramps up attacks against group it is a oppose its policies. we will get reaction on two players on what is being called the new white house enemies list. from the u.s. chamber of commerce, bruise johnson and from america s health insurance plan. also, afghanistan. what happens next with an election runoff and president obama deciding whether to commit more u.s. troops? we will ask abdullahabdullah, a presidential candidate. and the white house cracks down on eck eastboundtiv execu. we will ask the sunday panel if more government wage controls are on the way, all right now on fox news sunday. hello again from fox news in washington. we will discuss how the white house is targeting what it considers its enemies in a few minutes. first, the latest on afghanistan. with the presidential runoff there less than two weeks away and with president obama now one month into his policy review we wan
journalists but to relieve the tensions between our two countries. here is what he had to say. i don t believe in, you know, cowboy diplomacy and i know this would not be that case but yes, if he could sit down with the north koreans and convey a message from the administration and the congress to be more reasonable when it comes to verifying their nuclear program and getting away from the development of nuclear weapons it would be a good thing. well, obviously we have not heard from the white house whether or not bill clinton would be carrying any other kind of message, again, if you look at what robert gibbs said, he referred to it as a solely private mission. this is interesting, not the least of which bill clinton s own past with north korea, a big name, a big card to play. he almost went to north korea actually back in 2000, and of course, in a deal with them, a nuclear deal in 1994 that ultimately fell apart in 2003, but there s a history there and there s recent hi
co-host. i m glad to have mort zurkman with me today. mort, we were talking before the show started about bill clinton in north korea. have you ever visited north korea? no, i haven t. i have some familiarity through with north korea through an amazing documentary which i saw a couple of years which demonstrated the total control that kim jong-il had over that country. you saw when he was ill for six months there was not the slightest disturbance or anything like that. so you are seeing somebody dealing with only the leadership of that country and bill clinton is a very good man to do that. the last major breakthrough we ve had with north korea happened when another former president, jimmy carter, visited north korea in the early 90s. at the time, president clinton wasn t that excited about him going there but it ultimately led to that 1994 accord? the problem with the 1994 accord, of course, is the north koreans had no intention of keeping to its terms. we ve had se
start developing his own plans in this bill instead of just turning it over to the people further left in the house. he s got to do that, joe. at some point you think the people in the house lead ership speaker pelosi specifically, maybe should sit down with an american family who do their budgets on the kitchen table when you have three kids and they end up telling them you can buy x but you can t buy y. affordability. that s what they have to look at, what the president has to look at. we can t afford right now what s on the table coming out of the house. in 2009 the government s going to account for 40% of our gdp. 40% of our gdp. we were winning wars. and then you add on top of that all these other bills that are going through. it s a $23 billion bailout. $23 trillion in bailout costs that started with george w. bush and continued through this administration. we are having trouble affording doing what nancy pelosi and democrats want to do. the question i put out t