To. I m kayleigh mcenany. And for laura ingrahamy in. Of and this is a speciale. Edition of the graham angle. Frowell, one week from today, the first ballots for the presidential election will go out. The stakes could not be higher. And if you were wondering o what kamala harris dayne woe priorities were, her first interview provided little clarity. If you are electeulu dod, what would you do on day one in the white house? a n there are a number of ths i will tell you. First and foremost. Is one of my highest prioritiesto a is to do what we can to support and strengthen the middle class. O so what would you do? day one? day one, it s going to be cal about one implementing my plan for what i call an opportunity economortunityy. Regard i ve already laid out a number of proposals in that regard, coo which include what we re going to do to bring down the cost of everydayfay goods. O so vague, no answers. Well, i was wondering what happened to this commonly usedta to crystal clear about her
thought we could decide what taxes are and how we would spend the people s moneymoney. there will be great expenditure by state government and private industry. at&t talked about $1 billion more in expenditures. the bill also calls for 16,500 new i.r.s. agents. someone is going to collect new premiums. the write-down by the corporation, huge. they are required to do that by the s.e.c., and the congress is furious that this happens while the ink isn t dry. what is scary about the bill is the amount of demagoguery that surrounds it. if you re not for it, you re a racist. if you are a corporation, and you need to write down stuff you get before you go before congress because it s supposed to create savings. that is the scary thing if you think about it. to create $138 billion of savings in ten years by the way, $13 billion a year is not a lot of money in the context of our economy you have to raise taxes
thought we could decide what taxes are and how we would spend the people s moneymoney. there will be great expenditure by state government and private industry. at&t talked about $1 billion more in expenditures. the bill also calls for 16,500 new i.r.s. agents. someone is going to collect new premiums. the write-down by the corporation, huge. they are required to do that by the s.e.c., and the congress is furious that this happens while the ink isn t dry. what is scary about the bill is the amount of demagoguery that surrounds it. if you re not for it, you re a racist. if you are a corporation, and you need to write down stuff you get before you go before congress because it s supposed to create savings. that is the scary thing if you think about it. to create $138 billion of savings in ten years by the way, $13 billion a year is not a lot of money in the context of our economy you have to raise taxes