during the first 100 days of his presidency. washington journal continues. host: here to take questions and republicansut the care.ement for health julie, let s begin. the this revise and repeal formal care act completely question mark guest: no. that is primarily because congress is using a budget technique to get the bill through. it cannot be filibustered and only needs 50 vote 50 votes. the difficult side is there a lot of things you cannot do in budget reconciliation. everything in it has to be attributable to the federal budget. there are many things that they can t do in the bill and that initially was part of the problem. to repeal the whole thing, they would need 60 votes and they don t have 60 votes. host: what is excluded and included? included isthing .nything to do with taxes it takes away all the taxes. it takes away the premium subsidies and replaces them with different kinds of tax credits. in general, younger, healthier people would see more of their .remiu
our question is what is your message to the senate on health care? how should they approach medicaid? what role should states play? how should they handle pre-existing conditions? the numbers are on your screen. you can also reach us on social wj, and you can find us on facebook at facebook.com/cspan. the house legislation passed this week, would reshape the nation s health care system by eliminating federal medicaid funding and changing protections for people who buy insurance coverage on their own. usa today has a quick recap on the front page. here are the highlights of the house bill that allows insurers in some cases to raise premiums on customers with pre-existing conditions. it stops expansion of medicaid as of 2020. it ends penalties for individuals who don t buy insurance and eliminates cost-sharing payments that help low income people pay deductibles, allowing states to apply for waivers of mandatory insurance coverage and reveals taxes on the wealthy. the notion
we have the control room operator and our maintenance people. it does not take a lot of people to do what we do for the amount of coal we shipped out. washington journal continues. host: we re back with marianne jobse to discuss the april report. thank you for being here. the economy added 211,000 jobs in april, under than the 190,000 anticipated. what accounts for for the strong rebound? weaker jobsd a report in march, where the economy only added 79,000 jobs, so some of this could be because of a rebound from the previous month, which many attributed to bad weather. a lot of the job indicators in this recent report are consistent with previous month. ofit is not completely out the ordinary. it is consistent with the job growth we have been seeing in recent months. host: what sectors saw the biggest gains? guest: leisure and hospitality. we also saw a significant gain in health care as well as social assistance and business activities. a sense of whyve those sectors are
then the first debate between presidential candidates hillary clinton and donald trump. the fourth circuit hears arguments in a stop and frisk case from west virginia. our guest on newsmakers this week is the president of the service employees international union, mary kay henry. involved in many issues such as the minimum wage of $15. mary kay henry, welcome to c-span. mary kay: glad to be with you. pedro: joining us is ben geman and marianne levine, with political. levine, first question is for you. marianne: my first question to you is, how dear efforts this year compare dear efforts in 2008 and 2012 for president barack obama? mary kay: we have had more engagement for a longer period of time on an issue agenda that is connected to 15 in a union, child care, ending racial injustice and winning citizenship for immigrants. he organizing around those events years ago and made a decision to go into the battleground earlier than we have ever done with community partners a latin
time for the gentleman from washington has expired. the gentleman of arkansas, mr. hill, will be recognized for an additional five minutes on the occlusion of the time allotted to him under the five-minute rule. the gentleman from arkansas. think you, mr. chairman and the ranking member to hold this hearing. i appreciate your forthright testimony. i have been a customer of your company and have admired your company and i have used your of goalas an example setting for retail bankers. of what haseriod happened recently, i have recommended your company is a company to do business with and to stockholders. that comes with a pretty heavy burden to me. i have the same not in my stomach that you probably have. former persona that is worked in finance on and off for 35 years, this just is not a one-off situation down in the los angeles basement that wells fargo is struggling with. it is a systemic compliance principallyde the retail section of the bank. i know it is a huge frust