they ve been down for so long right. i think this is more of the same. it does prove the point that when something like this happens, everybody gets hurt a little. imagewise, the brand of politics takes a hit. what republicans will tell you and what the polls are showing us is that the republican brand itself is going to probably take the bigger hit here because our polls are showing that the people will be more likely to blame republicans. but it hasn t played out. it s not next year when we have midterms. let s remember that most of these congressmen, be they democrats or republicans are in safe seats, the vast majority of these guys return time after time after time. they re speaking for their constituents. that s where we are. we talked yesterday. markets fell around the world yesterday. what are you expecting to happen today? it s interesting. asia is open and it s holing steady as is the value of the dollar, which is kind of
we have our panel with us this morning. will cain is back. over here, he s usually there. he s there this morning. he s a columnist, of course, for theblaze.com. michelle is joining us, contributor to newsweek and daily beast. and also oh with have new is eight book? kingdom come ? first book. they have like five pages on you. and the means of reproduction, sex, power, and future of the world. my second book. where are your books? contributor and democratic strategist joining us as well. welcome to all of you. our starting point this morning is some very big dwobmentes happening in afghanistan. also fwhn deadly suicide car bombing. also an attempt by the taliban to try to poison the food of nato troops. it s all confirmed that food was contaminated at foreign operating base near the afghanistan/pakistan border. they found traces of bleach in fruit and coffee. no one got sick or even hurt. overnight there was a suicide car bomber who was able to kill 9 peopl
obviously it s been a logistical nightmare for those who live in and around dublin, but as far as having the british monarchy there for the better part of the week, how do they feel it s gone so far? reporter: people in dublin seem to be at the worst benign about the queen s visit here, but also very welcoming. and i think it can be split along generational lines for the most part. cork wrrk the queen is visiting today is seen as a much more republican entity, so security even tighter there. but dublin went back to normal yesterday morning after the state dinner the night before, and i think the government and the people are hoping that this will bring a sense of stability imagewise to the international community because the country is really in dire economic straits. as a former colleague of mine describes it here, an irish journalist, the visit will be
from being free. deadly attack in pakistan, the americans are in the firing ryan less than a month after their forces killed osama bin laden. and leave new friends behind. the queen s historic visit to ireland is almost over. we begin this hour in washington where israel s prime minister will meet the u.s. president today for what s expected to be a tense round of talks. benjamin netanyahu arrives less than 24 hours after barack obama deliver add big speech on relations in the middle east. he got a frosty reception in israel. it s an idea the u.s. has supported unofficially for years, but no president has ever before stated it. the borders of israel and palestine should be based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps so secure and recognized borders are established for both states. reporter: in return obama called on them to retain its security and recognize it as a jewish state. the 1967 borders were in place before the six-day war in which israel captured th
congressman. the tea party and conservatives capitalized on that built up distrust over cantor s other promises and made a convincing case that cantor could not be trusted with immigration either. i think both of those two things kind of make krystal s point. this was a guy whose big money kind of hurt him imagewise. immigration was layered on top of it. do you agree with that analysis? yeah. think he really angered a lot of local party. this guy was running around like he was frank underwood. i m going to be the speaker of the house. you need to listen to what i tell you to do. he wasn t connecting to the local party. he didn t have frank underwood s charm, though. not at all. he was attempting to manipulate who the party leaders were going to be, who the party chairman was going to be. this is a guy who spent more fundraising on i think there were several factors who come into play. everyone here can claim a victory. everyone here can also talk to why he ended up losing. it