so it doesn t necessarily solve all the issues but delays them a little bit. here is a quick note, what about health care, how is that included in this? obamacare is not part of this deal at all except for one point. there would be income verification for those americans who need to receive subsidies through the insurance exchanges. that is the one obamacare point that has been a big sticking point for tea party republicans. we ll see what happens as this continues. 11:25. it could already have changed. jon: one point you re talking about. that is not a great deal of money. they re not talking about obamacare. jenna: medical device tax, all we heard about, doesn t look like it is part of the deal. jon: we ll see. the speaker of the house john boehner suffered a pretty serious setback yesterday delivered not from democrats or the white house but members of his own party. house republicans refused to support a plan to end the government shutdown even though it did contain a few concessio
thank you very much. back to you. jon: for more on the deal to end the shutdown and advert what could be the country s first ever default, i m joined by former senior advisor to president george w. bush and a fox news contributor. speaker boehner and conservatives with republicans in the house have been trying to work this in some way that we get some concessions out of the white house and out of the president especially with regards to obamacare. it doesn t appear they will be successful. do i have that right, carl? you are right. the president agrees he will enforce a part of the law that he supported and was passed by democrat congress and that he signed and he then subsequently waived no statutory whatsoever. the claimant be verified to be sure they are legally entitled to these subsidies under the insurance exchanges.
let s get to the legislative language. we are expected to hear about it at any moment now. here are the details of the plan was thinking and resolution through january 15, a debt ceiling increase through february 7. requiring income verification for those who receive subsidies on the insurance exchanges and obamacare. a small bone thrown to republicans, not enough to satisfy them but perhaps helps a little bit. also creating bipartisan budget committee for both houses report by mid-december. if it is a done deal, it moves to the house. let s listen in to representative sean duffy talking about the house s perspective on all of this earlier today on fox news. report in the next half an hour or an hour announced. i m sure it will be passed by the senate and they will kick it over to the house. we will get jammed. we are going to get jammed, those were his closing words.
day 16 of the shutdown. our national debt still is skyrocketing and there are fears of repressions here and around the world if our government is not following authority. harry reid and mitch mcconnell finalizing a deal about when we got on the air at 11:00. the house planning to bring out the emerging agreement on a vote with conflicting reports on which legislative body will vote first. this 11th hour agreement coming after the agreements for a republican proposal exploded last night. still on the house floor today, the rhetoric was still very red-hot. g.o.p. lawmaker refusing to budge on his opposition to obamacare. i will continue to fight to defined as much of the bad law as possible. obamacare remains completely unpopular around the country for good reason. it s hurting jobs, hurting
future of our country. throughout this debate, the public is rightly focused on obamacare. for good reason. this law is ravaging our econo economy, killing jobs, driving up premiums and driving people off the health care plans they have and like in droves. it is a disastrous rollout of a sign of even worse things to come. and the refusal to delay it reflects a kind of stubborn ideological exception it will do unknown damage our country. republicans remain determined to repeal the terrible law. but for today, for today, the relief we hope for is to reopen the government, avoid default, and protect the historic cuts we achieved under the budget control act. this is far less than many have hoped for, frankly. but far better than some have