states. in other words, they would have to pull another bush v. gore. they would have to take their previous rationale and throw it out the window and say we hate obamacare and you re going to have to deal with it. based on oral arguments today, what are they going to do. nina is here, she was there. you re smiling. i have a connection with everything you just said. that was a slightly more partisan and ideological take on this. i am curious your sense today in that room, where the justices were on this case. well, you really couldn t tell in some ways, because we had four of the more liberal members of the court who clearly were saying, congress wrote a law that was quite deliberate in its purpose, and you
yeah, who knows what the benghazi committee specifically will focus on going forward. but certainly i don t think we ll hear republicans over the next year and a half keep beating the drum on benghazi. they ll be talking about the e-mails. and anytime a new allegation comes up with hillary clinton, how she handled one thing or another, the question is always going to be who knows in the e-mails that we never got. it could support our entire theory of the case. talk to me jonathan about the sociology of the people in clinton world. this to me is such a perfect example of a group of people who were born into crisis, and basically lived in the bunker. they re all just used to being in the bunker. like people are trying to destroy us and we must act as if people are trying to destroy us or they will succeed in destroying us. never give an inch chris. these people were born into that culture, the folks around the clintons, most of the older generation of clinton aides has moved on. so
the department of justice to put more resources into this area, and to come up with a targeted enforcement program that will identify jurisdictions that are likely to have problems. thank you very much. really appreciate it. my pleasure. all right. how is today s king versus burwell, the obamacare case before the supreme court. we ll tell you ahead.
at the overall purpose of the act. and the sense i got today was that the solicitor general representing the obama administration was pretty forceful in making the case that the overall purpose of the act was to say to the states, look, you can make these exchanges if you want, and if you don t want to, we ll do it instead. right. and a lot of people quoting scalia today. nina, thank you very much. thank you. there s a new metric for deciding who among the possible republican 2016 contenders is the strongest on foreign relations and that is how hard they clap.
beating the drum on benghazi. they ll be talking about the e-mails. and anytime a new allegation comes up with hillary clinton, how she handled one thing or another, the question is always going to be who knows in the e-mails that we never got. it could support our entire theory of the case. talk to me, jonathan, about the sociology of the people in clinton world. this to me is such a perfect example of a group of people who were born into crisis, and basically lived in the bunker. they re all just used to being in the bunker. like people are trying to destroy us, and we must act as if people are trying to destroy us or they will succeed in destroying us. never give an inch, chris. these people were born into that culture, the folks around the clintons, most of the older generation of clinton aides has moved on. some of them are still around, but the next generation just grows up in it. look, they re absolutely secretive. they absolutely want to fight over everything. and they wa