but as always, the finer details reveal the true winners and losers of the gop s latest manufactured political crisis has a new york times writes, the president and his negotiators believe they worked out a deal that allowed republicans to claim big spending cuts, even as the reality was far more modest. joining me now is one of those negotiators, shalanda young, director of the office of management and budget director. welcome back to the sunday show. thank you, jonathan. let s put on the screen some of the provisions of the law. i know we did that in the introduction. imposes new caps on federal spending for two years, restarts the federal student loan repayments, new work requirements for food stamps, cuts 1.8 billion dollars in irs funding, rescinds 30 billion dollars of unspent covid funds. now, the president the speaker both said they didn t get everything they wanted. what didn t the white house came? look, we always said, if you have a true budget discussion, if
dense and probably pretty angry opinions in the sense. based on the vibe of the court this term. and the session is going to be lit, emanate on one more thing, talia. let me play you some recent comments from chief justice john roberts and get some reaction on the other side. i want to assure people that i am committed to making certain that we as a court here to the highest standards of conduct. we are continuing to look at things we can do to give practical effect to that commitment. and i am confident that there are ways to do that that are consistent with our status as independent branch of government under the constitution separation of powers fit. so, dahlia, should the american people except that given the ongoing ethics sandals that a general sense the ultra conservative majority is under or out of step with the american people? i just feel for the chief justice. i think that he keeps having
there is no telling when mcgahn will testify. he is appealing this. so is the department of justice. the house hasn t even agreed to wait for a week when appeals are filed. we start with our chief white house correspondent jim acosta with me. jim, what s the president s reaction to this judge s ruling? reporter: you know, so far, brooke, i think the president is trying to have it both ways. we are seeing the president s sweets from earlier this morning where he says he would like people like john bolton and mick mulvaney and mike pompeo to testify, but also trying to protect the rights of the presidency. and the constitution separation of powers. essentially what the white house is arguing and what the justice dpept department is arg guing with th ruling from judge jackson. here s what they had to say. the president tweeted ashort
allocated to states to fund the wall. we ll try to halt the president from violating the constitution, separation of powers from stealing money from american and states that have been allocated by congress liaw fly. the president cannot. a flu poll out shows only 36% of registered voters approve of the president s national emergency declaration to build the wall and 61% disapprove. white house officials say the white house is moving forward using the funds despite all of these lawsuits. the strategy is to the drug funds and at a later day dip into the military construction funds. they can only be used under the
pg&e wants you to plan ahead by mapping out escape routes and preparing a go kit, in case you need to get out quickly. for more information on how to be prepared and keep your family safe, visit pge.com/safety. president trump taking aim at those channelling the national emergency declaration. the president tweeting 16 states lead by democrats have filed a lawsuit in ochk the ninth circuit. they are suing the president arguing that it violates the constitution separation of powers. pamela brown now picks up the