jobs away from america. shannon: starting point wanting to do it for whatever was their priority. chris, as you said, these are priorities. i want to read something from national review. it notes that there is different coverage of a budget. a trump budget versus a biden budget saying this the new york times, 4.4 trillion in spending on a republican is an irresponsible boom dogle. while $6 trillion under democrats represent a bold new competitive vision for the country. chris? look, it s time for us to understand what our priorities are. and yes, i believe that the trump budgets were a boondoggle. he gave all of our capital, all of our resources away to a very few people, few people in this country and did it not help the vast majority of americans. what biden needs to do is go big. obama s mistake was not going big enough. and i think biden is not going to make that mistake twice and i think democrats will approve, maybe not [audio cuts out]
coming out to lay out the president s budget proposal for the upcoming year. this is something we ve talked about in the past. not just specific to the trump administration, but the budget recommendations end up being sort of administration wish list and it s not often that you know, we, i should say it is often that we hear the term dead on arrival here in washington with respect to a president s budget. this happened under obama. republicans up on capitol hill greeted president obama s budgets is same way and democrats are greeting these trump budgets the same way and specifically, what you just laid out a few moments ago that $8.6 billion that s been proposed for the president s signature item on his wish list, the wall, that s democrats are not keen on give iing the president. they re still fighting over this national emergency declaration down on the border the president s using to tap into funds administratively. but there will be lots of other questions. it s been 42 days since