with us now, cnn congressional correspondent lauren fox. i noted this last night. mitch mcconnell doesn t say anything by accident. every syllable is carefully chosen. so he did this for a reason. reporter: exactly. he was very strategic yesterday during his republican press conference. he didn t comment on this monday afternoon when he got into washington. but we were prepped and ready for tuesday during that press conference. and he wasn t mincing words. he made it clear he was frustrated with the republican national committee censuring of two members of the house of representatives saying that that isn t the rnc s job. in fact, many republican senators argued they had been outside of their lane, let the voters decide whether or not they want someone like liz cheney to serve another term in the state of wyoming. now, juxta posed to kevin
center. jenna: they better get working they only have a couple of hours before they need the stage tonight. there is quite a line up of people talking, marco rubio, governor romney, and the mystery guest, we don t know who that is. maybe james rosen knows something about that. last night was paul ryan s big moment in the spotlight accepting the party nomination for vice president. it didn t take long for democrats to tear apart what he had to say. tis the season for that on both sites. james rosen is live in tampa with a fact check on all of this and maybe, maybe a scoop on the mystery guest. james. reporter: maybe a twaoe tweese at the end of the hit. jim messina wasn t mincing words at 4:37am today when he blasted out a fundraising email in which he accused congressman ryan of having quote lied about medicare and the stimulus and the
again throughout the hour. let s go to asbury park, new jersey. adam berg is there for us. adam, the governor wasn t mincing any words earlier today strongly urging beach-goers to leeft jersey shore. how is that going since this is a heavy vacation season? you know, it s right in the middle. i would say half the people i talked to are taking it seriously, boarding up homes and businesses. the other half are basically saying i m going to ride this out. i don t think it s going to be a big deal. what i ve been trying to stress to people, the same thing i heard on the air a few moments ago. even though this system mi weaken here, get towards category status, it s such a large system that the wind field is already out there. the waves and surf already going to be generated. the worst things that will happen at this point, even if the winds continue to come down, will be basically surge coming over places like this, the boardwalk here. ruining a lot of folks first floors and businesses an
house minority leader john boehner wasn t mincing words. here s what he says about the bill. it s going to make credit harder for the american people to get. it institutionalizes too big to fail and gives far too much authority to federal bureaucrats to rule out virtually any company in america. take those one at a time. will it make loans harder to get? the answer is yes. that s the point. the bill requires banks to have more cash on hand, meaningless to lend. why? remember how we got into this mess in the first place? loans were way too easy and too cheap. people were getting mortgages for expensive homes without proving that they could afford it. the consumer federation of america s praising the bill saying, unfettered credit helped to bring our economy down. but the credit unions are not so happy. they say it is going to hurt their ability to provide low-cost financial services to 92 million americans. tony? patricia, is too big to fail still a part of the legislation?