the president again. in 30 minutes, he ll speak from the roosevelt room, explaining the white house s next steps because a lot could change with a ruling that sided with a web designer opposed to same-sex marriage. and a lot will change now that the president cannot constitutionally cancel student debt. joining me now nbc news correspondent julia ainsley who s outside of the supreme court for us, and nbc news white house correspondent mike memoli. noah pransky is here with us as well, and cnbc washington correspondent, emily wilkins. thank you very much for being here, everybody. so 6-3 ruling, two more 6-3 rulings, i should say. student debt. you re right, katy, if somebody was going to sum up this supreme court right now, the name of the book might be 6-3 because we re seeing so many opinions fall along those lines. today we saw two more, the first coming in, a case having to do with a web designer in colorado who says that she does have gay clients but didn t want to be
julia was saying it was toward the liberals. are you saying it s more directed to the public, the liberals are saying this vehemently. doesn t mean we don t like each other. doesn t mean we don t respect each other. could be a combination of the two. i read that paragraph as a message to the american public. that s how i read it too. yeah, i read this as a message to the american public. you see us sniping at each other in these decisions. you even see some of my colleagues going out in public and making speeches, right, where they are criticizing one another or criticizing journalists who have the audacity to critique us as political actors. don t worry, america, we re holding it together. what looks intensely personal and vitriolic isn t that. we respect one another. we consider our opponents in this dispute to be reasonable minds with whom we can disagree.