0
0.0
Jun 10, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
this is hosted by the manhattan institute. >> hi, everybody. i'm a contributing editor at city journal. i'm happy to moderate this panel on bodnar mx. and the cost of intervention. before i start, to set the stage and go little further one of the things we that president biden came into office after one of the shortest recessions in modern memory. and shortest recessions in modern memory. you would think it would have a very positive political boost from overseeing recovery dropped to the highest level what the best we've seen in 40 years the biden camp lane after what he characterized as the chaos of the trump years but surprisingly to many people he actually oversaw one of the most activist economic policies in modern times rivals in some sense the achievement of the great society or new deal in terms of economic interventionism in terms of spending and new regulatory policy. although the administration has seen a rise of very low unemployment as the administration likes to emphasize is also seen an era of very high inflation vast unprecedent
this is hosted by the manhattan institute. >> hi, everybody. i'm a contributing editor at city journal. i'm happy to moderate this panel on bodnar mx. and the cost of intervention. before i start, to set the stage and go little further one of the things we that president biden came into office after one of the shortest recessions in modern memory. and shortest recessions in modern memory. you would think it would have a very positive political boost from overseeing recovery dropped to the...
0
0.0
Jun 12, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
in the middle right there is allison schrager also seen your fellow at the manhattan institute.he's the author of the very fun but serious book i highly recommend to you. also a regular contributor ■iat the economist. and bloomberg. if i could i would like to start with may seem overbroad question that ■<■is what do eac of the panelists think is the most consequential decision biden's presidency. >> the economic tone of the administration is really seinam. if any of you held out hope this administration would moderate paut deficits, maybe even listen to economists, the american rescue plan shows us we were getting a highly medical partisan and quite ideologically progressive administration. office, there was so much stimulus already in the system and the economy was reopening that the cbo said the economy was only $420 billion below ■capacity. we got $350 bailout state budget deficits that didn't actually exist. union pension bailout money for schools, unemployment bonuses, all grieved with child credit and even more rebates. so economists across the spectrum warrant this bill i
in the middle right there is allison schrager also seen your fellow at the manhattan institute.he's the author of the very fun but serious book i highly recommend to you. also a regular contributor ■iat the economist. and bloomberg. if i could i would like to start with may seem overbroad question that ■
0
0.0
Jun 24, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
we, the manhattan institute, are dedicated to building hayek's legacy and this prize is the crown jewel ofse efforts. each year we award $15,000 to the book that best and advances hayek's conceptions liberty. the hayek prize is onef the most generous book prizes in the world tonight. we wilhear from the 2024 hayek prize winners. senator phil gramm and john early, who together the late robert ecklund, wrote the myth american inequality a ground breaking work that rigorously and carefully the extent to ic officials statistics exaggerate the extent of income ineqlity a understate generosity of government transfers. beforeurn it over to my distinguished colleague john tierney, however, there are several peopleou thank for their support and hard work that goes into this prize. none of thor would be possible without the support and friendship of manhattan institut thomas smith, who first conceived of the prize together, they have supported the prize since itsnc thanking d mrs. smith for their generosity and■gfreedom. in. addition to mr. smith, we have a number of other manhattan trustees who
we, the manhattan institute, are dedicated to building hayek's legacy and this prize is the crown jewel ofse efforts. each year we award $15,000 to the book that best and advances hayek's conceptions liberty. the hayek prize is onef the most generous book prizes in the world tonight. we wilhear from the 2024 hayek prize winners. senator phil gramm and john early, who together the late robert ecklund, wrote the myth american inequality a ground breaking work that rigorously and carefully the...
0
0.0
Jun 11, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
institute.ry pleased to have introduced and moderate the panel. before i start part of that you would think you have a very positive political bstall of us inflation. almost immediately after he took office and shot to the highest level wh we seen about 40 years. surprisingly so many people he oversaw one of the most activist teconomic policies in modern times rivals in some sense the achievement of the great society or new deal in terms of economic interventionism and spending in terms of its new revelatory policy. although the administration has seen errors of very low they have also seen an era of very high inflation, unprecedented levels of government spending and new interventionist policies. here today to talk about the issues of vitamix the consequences and effects of it are three of my favorite commentators and speakers first is brian reidel a senior fellow at the manhattan institute of for rob portman served as director of budget for marco rubio 2016 campaign. if any of you have followe
institute.ry pleased to have introduced and moderate the panel. before i start part of that you would think you have a very positive political bstall of us inflation. almost immediately after he took office and shot to the highest level wh we seen about 40 years. surprisingly so many people he oversaw one of the most activist teconomic policies in modern times rivals in some sense the achievement of the great society or new deal in terms of economic interventionism and spending in terms of its...
0
0.0
Jun 24, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
we, the manhattan institute, are dedicated tocy and this prize ie crown jewel of theseeach year wo theok that best and advances hayek's conceptionsf and political liberty. the hayek prize is one of the most generous book■r■&99 prizese world tonight. 214 hayes. senator phil gramm and john early, who together the late robert ecklund, wrote the myth american inequality a)$ ground breaking work that rigorously and carefully the extent to which officials statistics exaggerate the extent of income inequality and understate generosity of government transfers. before i turn it over to my distinguished colleague john tierney, however, there are several people i would like to thank for thr support and hard work that goes into this prize. none of this work would be possible without the support and friendship of manhattan institute trustee smith, who first conceived of the prize and, diane smith. ther, they have supported the prize since its inception. please join me in thanking and mrs. smith for their generosity and commitment to the cause of ■■■k freedom. :lin.smith, we have a number of other m
we, the manhattan institute, are dedicated tocy and this prize ie crown jewel of theseeach year wo theok that best and advances hayek's conceptionsf and political liberty. the hayek prize is one of the most generous book■r■&99 prizese world tonight. 214 hayes. senator phil gramm and john early, who together the late robert ecklund, wrote the myth american inequality a)$ ground breaking work that rigorously and carefully the extent to which officials statistics exaggerate the extent of...
0
0.0
Jun 29, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
none of this work would be possible without the support and friendship of manhattan institute trustee thomas smith, who first conceived of the prize and, diane smith. together, they have supported the prize since its inception. please join me in thanking and mrs. smith for their generosity and commitment to the cause of freedom. in. addition to mr. smith, we have a number of other manhattan trustees who have kindly joined us tonight and charters michael kaufman, nick nell and russell pantoja. thank you for being here. i'd also like to recognize institute president emeritus larry mone. larry mote has done an enormous amount for the cause of freedom and we're very fortunate to have him tonight. thank you. i'd also like recognize the hayek prize jury, the distinguished women and men who carefully read each nominated book before selecting the winner. brian anderson donald j. boudreau tommy stone. katherine magee award. james pierson. amity john taylor and course. john tierney, the chairman. the hayek prize jury. john is a senior fellow at the manhattan institute, a contributing editor at
none of this work would be possible without the support and friendship of manhattan institute trustee thomas smith, who first conceived of the prize and, diane smith. together, they have supported the prize since its inception. please join me in thanking and mrs. smith for their generosity and commitment to the cause of freedom. in. addition to mr. smith, we have a number of other manhattan trustees who have kindly joined us tonight and charters michael kaufman, nick nell and russell pantoja....
0
0.0
Jun 23, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
institute and i'm very proud to introduce our hayek prize celebration of friedrich hayek, one of theho was awarded the nobel prize in 1974. hayek
institute and i'm very proud to introduce our hayek prize celebration of friedrich hayek, one of theho was awarded the nobel prize in 1974. hayek
0
0.0
Jun 18, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
during his or marks at an event hosted by the manhattan institute scott bessent weighed in on tax policy, this is ju [inaudible conversat >> hi, everyone. is my great pas to introduce scott bessent, founder, ceo and chief investment officer of t-square group, gbal inment fm prior to that he served as chief investment officer where he held a number■é investments. outsidefinance, a prolific philanthropist includg the state of south carolina. plse■@ join mewelcoming scott bessent. [applause]>> you are a respect. you stard ighing in public the on larger questions of economic policy, the 24 election. what motivated you to speak out about the direction of american economic policy? >> thanks to the manhattan institute for having me.nvitedu know, heather mcdonald, chris russo, i don't need anymore. it's a good question. ve ing, always politically adjacent, people ask me what is macro st live at the edge of geoldúics and eventually gravity wins. for a long time i have been a thing political situations, economic situations and i decided that 2023-24, important from no behind my desk because we are
during his or marks at an event hosted by the manhattan institute scott bessent weighed in on tax policy, this is ju [inaudible conversat >> hi, everyone. is my great pas to introduce scott bessent, founder, ceo and chief investment officer of t-square group, gbal inment fm prior to that he served as chief investment officer where he held a number■é investments. outsidefinance, a prolific philanthropist includg the state of south carolina. plse■@ join mewelcoming scott bessent....
0
0.0
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
a fire side chat with the president of the manhattan institute.t to make about bidenomics today. >> i mean, look, it's really just a return to central planning. >>> it's what didn't work in the '60s and '70s. it's almost like the joe's '70s show, the failed policies and it's the exact opposite of what we saw under donald trump and trump 1.0. there, the free market was released, deregulation, everyone did well. lower income, upper income, the markets did great. under bidenomics, which i like to like to call bi biden itis, e an acute disease, you don't know when it will be fatal. they have central planning and the macro framework i think is way out of line and they try to make a bunch of micro kind of in-flight adjustments that don't work and it hasn't been great for the economy. i called this the anabolic steroid economy. looks great on the outside. inside, it's killing your organs and some of the headline numbers are fun but, look, what we're seeing now from all the surveys -- if you're in the top 20%, if you've got assets and i've been talking ab
a fire side chat with the president of the manhattan institute.t to make about bidenomics today. >> i mean, look, it's really just a return to central planning. >>> it's what didn't work in the '60s and '70s. it's almost like the joe's '70s show, the failed policies and it's the exact opposite of what we saw under donald trump and trump 1.0. there, the free market was released, deregulation, everyone did well. lower income, upper income, the markets did great. under bidenomics,...
0
0.0
Jun 23, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and that is exactly whawe we, the manhattan institute, are dedicated to building hayek's te crown jewelf these eoreach yeo the book that best and advances hayek's conceptions of and polical liberty. the hayek prize is one of the most generous book tonight. we will hear from the 2024 hayek prize winns. gramm and john early, who together the late bert ecklund, wrote the myth american inequality a ground breaking work that rigorously and carefully the extent to whichhe extent of income inequality andtransfers. before i turn it over to my ney, however, there are several people i would like to thank for their support and hard work that goes into this prize. none of this work be possible without the support and friendship of manhattan institute trustee t smith, who first conceived of the prize and, diane smith. ■together, they have supported the prize since its inception. please join me in■s. smith for y and commitment to the cause of freedom. ■tin. additiono mr. sm w manhattan trustees who have kindly joined charters michael kaufman, nick nell and russlfor. i'd also like to recognize institu
and that is exactly whawe we, the manhattan institute, are dedicated to building hayek's te crown jewelf these eoreach yeo the book that best and advances hayek's conceptions of and polical liberty. the hayek prize is one of the most generous book tonight. we will hear from the 2024 hayek prize winns. gramm and john early, who together the late bert ecklund, wrote the myth american inequality a ground breaking work that rigorously and carefully the extent to whichhe extent of income inequality...
0
0.0
Jun 11, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
first is brian, the senior fellow at the manhattan institute and former chief economist forrtman and he servee director of budget for a marco rubio's 2016 campaign. if any of you have followed the news recently you probably would have seen brian commentating a widely many different forms and many different publications. steven over on my left is a fellow at the manhattan r senior advisor of the u.s. treasury. he's published also widely in academic forums such as the american economic journal, wall street journal and elsewhere. and in the middle right there is allison, also a senior fellow at the manhattan institute and a contributing editor of city journal made is the author give a very serious book that i highly recommend to you on account, but also a regular contributor at, has been a regular contributor at the economist and at bloomberg. so, if i could, i would like toa man over broad question and that is what do each think is the mostth consequential decision of the presidency, and if i could start with >> thank you. i think the economic tone of the administration was set in the
first is brian, the senior fellow at the manhattan institute and former chief economist forrtman and he servee director of budget for a marco rubio's 2016 campaign. if any of you have followed the news recently you probably would have seen brian commentating a widely many different forms and many different publications. steven over on my left is a fellow at the manhattan r senior advisor of the u.s. treasury. he's published also widely in academic forums such as the american economic journal,...
0
0.0
Jun 7, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the manhattan institute in washington d.c. include an economist and strategist and it's about two and a half hours. >> good afternoon, everyone. the manhattan research and advocacy organization dedicated. carolina. you are watching live coverage . >> there is an emerging consensus around the future of free enterprise here in washington dc in essence, is a free enterprise to have the future or at least not much of one. the free-market orthodoxy can be found in the left and right and increasingly in the halls of power. if the biden administration the core animating conviction the agent neoliberalism is not met by nomex represents a paradigm in which thoughtful industrial planning will build the economy of the future. and stringently regulated politically client private ■@ enterprise will have the privilege of playing a supporting role in ■meeting. needless to say, by demonic because it resonated with the wider public. the president and allies largely avoid the term these days. and for good reason. in recent echelon and site surv
the manhattan institute in washington d.c. include an economist and strategist and it's about two and a half hours. >> good afternoon, everyone. the manhattan research and advocacy organization dedicated. carolina. you are watching live coverage . >> there is an emerging consensus around the future of free enterprise here in washington dc in essence, is a free enterprise to have the future or at least not much of one. the free-market orthodoxy can be found in the left and right and...
0
0.0
Jun 26, 2024
06/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
let's bring in a senior fellow and director of constitutional studies at the manhattan institute. there was a tweet put out on president biden's account and what he said. i'm appalled by the scenes outside the synagogue in l.a. intimidating them is unamerican. then he says americans have a right to peaceful protest but blocking access to a house of worship and engaging in violence is never acceptable. it is more than that. it is illegal. >> it is illegal. why isn't the justice department getting involved and investigating this? this isn't the first time it happened. we had other incidents of vandalism across the street from the white house a couple of weeks ago. nothing. the more this is allowed to go on, the more these not protestors, but violent mob activists learn that as long as they don't kill someone. that happened one time as well in november. then they get off scot-free. even before we get to the face act, originally designed to protect access to abortion clinics and houses of worship. what are the police doing and the leadership in l.a. and california? police were told to
let's bring in a senior fellow and director of constitutional studies at the manhattan institute. there was a tweet put out on president biden's account and what he said. i'm appalled by the scenes outside the synagogue in l.a. intimidating them is unamerican. then he says americans have a right to peaceful protest but blocking access to a house of worship and engaging in violence is never acceptable. it is more than that. it is illegal. >> it is illegal. why isn't the justice department...
0
0.0
Jun 6, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
institute live to get eastern on c-span2.t c-span.org. ♪♪ >> friday night he spends 2024 weekly round of coverage providing one-stop shop discover candidates across the little reports. updated poll numbers and campaign ads. all caps he spends 2024 campaign trail friday night 7:30 p.m. eastern on c-span, online@c-span.org or download the podcast c-span now, free mobile app over every you get your podcast. c-span, unfiltered feel politics. >> c-span has been delivering unfiltered congressional coverage for 45 years. the highlight key moments. >> sister
institute live to get eastern on c-span2.t c-span.org. ♪♪ >> friday night he spends 2024 weekly round of coverage providing one-stop shop discover candidates across the little reports. updated poll numbers and campaign ads. all caps he spends 2024 campaign trail friday night 7:30 p.m. eastern on c-span, online@c-span.org or download the podcast c-span now, free mobile app over every you get your podcast. c-span, unfiltered feel politics. >> c-span has been delivering unfiltered...
0
0.0
Jun 7, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
in the middle right there is allison schrager also seen your fellow at the manhattan institute.s the author of the very fun but serious book i highly recommend to you. also a regular contributor at the economist. and bloomberg. if i could i would like to start with may seem overbroad question that is what do each of the panelists think is the most consequential decision biden's presidency. >> the economic tone of the administration is really set in the first 50 days with the american rescue plan. if any of you held out hope this administration would moderate bipartisan, care about deficits, maybe even listen to economists, the american rescue plan shows us we were getting a highly medical partisan and quite ideologically progressive administration. when biden took office, there was so much stimulus already in the system and the economy was reopening that the cbo said the economy was only $42billion below capacity. we got $350 bailout state budget deficits that didn't actually exist. union pension bailout money for schools, unemployment bonuses, all grieved with child credit and
in the middle right there is allison schrager also seen your fellow at the manhattan institute.s the author of the very fun but serious book i highly recommend to you. also a regular contributor at the economist. and bloomberg. if i could i would like to start with may seem overbroad question that is what do each of the panelists think is the most consequential decision biden's presidency. >> the economic tone of the administration is really set in the first 50 days with the american...
0
0.0
Jun 23, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
institute and i'm very proud to introduce our hayek prize celebration of friedrich hayek, one of the most a celebrated economist who was awarded the nobel prize in 1974. hayek did more than just make ■g. he inspired a generation of economic reformers who helped libera mound the world. and his message remains vitally future above all else, hayekas a partizan of individual liberty who saw economic freedom, as in strictly linked to humanprogrese dangers of an unlimited state y people of agency dignity and creative potential. i'm proud to say thateked a roln of the manhattan. one of our founders, s assful entrepreneur, once asked him how to reverse therohayek urged hime exactly what we do today. building hayek's legacy and this prize is the crown jewel of these efforts. each year we award $15,000 to the book that best andyek's cond political liberty. the hayek prize is one of the most generous book prizes in the worldht. we will hear from the 2024 hayek prize winners. senator phil together the late robert ecklund, wrote the myth american inequality a ground breaking work that rigorously
institute and i'm very proud to introduce our hayek prize celebration of friedrich hayek, one of the most a celebrated economist who was awarded the nobel prize in 1974. hayek did more than just make ■g. he inspired a generation of economic reformers who helped libera mound the world. and his message remains vitally future above all else, hayekas a partizan of individual liberty who saw economic freedom, as in strictly linked to humanprogrese dangers of an unlimited state y people of agency...
0
0.0
Jun 10, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
institute. mckinney of north carolina. you are watching live coverage on c-span2. >> there is an emerging consensus around the future of washington dc in essence, is a free enterprise to have the future or at least not much of one. the free-market orthodoxy can be found in the left and right and increasingly in the halls of power. if the biden administration the core animating conviction the agent neoliberalism is not met by nomex represents a paradigm in which thoughtful industrial planning will build the economy of the future. and stringently regulated politically client private enterprise will have the privilege of playing a supporting role in meeting. needless to say, by demonic because it resonated with the wider public. the president and allies largely avoid the term these days. and for good reason. in recent echelon and site survey do not% of voters cited the cost of living as a biggest challefacountry. 85% of respondents told ap that in november. only 31% of registered voters believe the
institute. mckinney of north carolina. you are watching live coverage on c-span2. >> there is an emerging consensus around the future of washington dc in essence, is a free enterprise to have the future or at least not much of one. the free-market orthodoxy can be found in the left and right and increasingly in the halls of power. if the biden administration the core animating conviction the agent neoliberalism is not met by nomex represents a paradigm in which thoughtful industrial...
0
0.0
Jun 11, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
>> first, thanks to you, the manhattan institute for having me. when they invited me, just so you know we have heather mcdonnell we have christmas at okay you had mythos too. i don't need anymore. but it is a good question. i've always been politically interested in macro investing. you're always a politically adjacent because geopolitics, people ask me what is macro investing? i said we live at the edge of geopolitics, economics and gravity. eventually gravity wins. for a long time i have been analyzing political situations, economic situations i decided 2023, 2024 it was important for me too 2 come out from behind my desk. we are at a very unique moment here. i would list three reaso■ns or three things i am focused on. one, just in the u.s. i am alarmed by the size of these deficits and spending. we do not have a tax problem we have a spending problem. i have never really seen anything quite -- we have never seen anything quite like this i am an economic historian for anyone who wants for better or r clinton johnson 57 this is really alarming in
>> first, thanks to you, the manhattan institute for having me. when they invited me, just so you know we have heather mcdonnell we have christmas at okay you had mythos too. i don't need anymore. but it is a good question. i've always been politically interested in macro investing. you're always a politically adjacent because geopolitics, people ask me what is macro investing? i said we live at the edge of geopolitics, economics and gravity. eventually gravity wins. for a long time i...
0
0.0
Jun 26, 2024
06/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> we have laws against assault and vandalism and my colleagues at the manhattan institute that support anti-masking. it worked against the k.k.k. >> dana: before we go the high temperatures in d.c. doing a number on this wax statue of abraham lincoln. the sweltering heat melting the figure and causing lincoln to lose his head. officials are repairing the replica. it is supposed to melt over time and going faster than they thought. >> aishah: is that the reason why they did it during the summer? >> dana: aishah, this is art. >> harris: we begin with a fox news alert. far left democrat squad lost a member. scandal-plagued congressman jamaal bowman has cost the new york democratic primary a seat. the left's divide over the israel/hamas war played big at the ballot box in what some call a litmus test for the party. a more moderate democrat then stepped in and took bowman's place. they will retain potentially that seat in the primary at least that's what will happen. we don't know what's happening as we move forward. we'll cover it all. i'm harris faulkner and you are in "the faulkner focus
. >> we have laws against assault and vandalism and my colleagues at the manhattan institute that support anti-masking. it worked against the k.k.k. >> dana: before we go the high temperatures in d.c. doing a number on this wax statue of abraham lincoln. the sweltering heat melting the figure and causing lincoln to lose his head. officials are repairing the replica. it is supposed to melt over time and going faster than they thought. >> aishah: is that the reason why they did...
0
0.0
Jun 10, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
institute.ching live coverage on c-span2. >> there is an emerging consensus around the future of washington dc in essence, is a free enterprise to have the future or at least not much of
institute.ching live coverage on c-span2. >> there is an emerging consensus around the future of washington dc in essence, is a free enterprise to have the future or at least not much of
0
0.0
Jun 24, 2024
06/24
by
FBC
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
in april, by the way, in terms of e eric adams' polling, manhattan institute did a poll that showed 16%ore progressive mayor but i think there's huge appetite for someone to come in and say time out, we can do better and make the city liveable again. >> if you're not growing you're dying. since 2020 the city lost 600,000 residents even with the illegal migrants coming in, being shipped up here. also, the environment's changing. everything goes back, the reason why i love what i do, everything goes back to economics. if you're economically growing you're attracting people. not only is there political issues and criminal issues and bad social issues, the game's changing, the world is changing, you don't have to be crowded in a big city to get opportunity. the young generation isn't thinking that way. you need someone in there that's going to understand the future of the economy, the few comur of the world, attract the younger generations to move to the city. cheryl: the banks in manhattan, most have moved operation, half of private equity is in florida now. >> you've seen a lot of people
in april, by the way, in terms of e eric adams' polling, manhattan institute did a poll that showed 16%ore progressive mayor but i think there's huge appetite for someone to come in and say time out, we can do better and make the city liveable again. >> if you're not growing you're dying. since 2020 the city lost 600,000 residents even with the illegal migrants coming in, being shipped up here. also, the environment's changing. everything goes back, the reason why i love what i do,...
0
0.0
Jun 29, 2024
06/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
institute.s the delay in the immunity decision telling us anything about how that might go? >> i think it's just telling us that they're really trying to cross their ts and dot their is and get it right. presumably drawing the line of what is official conduct for which presidents will be immune versus acting as private citizens which they will not be. paul: okay. yeah, that's what i expect as well. so let's turn to this fisher case which is about the obstruction for the january 6th rioters. could have significant results for a lot of these cases. how do you read it? >> well, this is a technical statutory interpretation about a catch-all provision of sarbanes-oxley. remember that? about the financial irregularities? and this reminds me of case from about ten years ago where a fisherman was throwing out undersized fish so as not to be caught by the fishing regulators and was also tripped up by sarbanes of coursely. the court ruled that meant financial records, it didn't incur collude fish if. paul
institute.s the delay in the immunity decision telling us anything about how that might go? >> i think it's just telling us that they're really trying to cross their ts and dot their is and get it right. presumably drawing the line of what is official conduct for which presidents will be immune versus acting as private citizens which they will not be. paul: okay. yeah, that's what i expect as well. so let's turn to this fisher case which is about the obstruction for the january 6th...
0
0.0
Jun 19, 2024
06/24
by
FBC
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
cheryl: joining me now is lonski group president joan lonski, manhattan institute senior fellow allisonoth of them, john, especially with the job searches. what do you make of what they told us? >> whoo i can't help but think, how goodness we had 272,000 jobs added to payrolls in the month of may, let's not forget at the same time the number of people working fell by more than 400,000. on balance i think this is a weak job market. i'm going to mention one statistic, that is what is going on with the year-over-year growth rate for private sector wage and salary income per job. a year ago it was growing by 3.7%. it slowed to 2.5%. you don't get that type of slowdown without a soft inching of the job market. my sense is that may's 4% unemployment rate actually understates the softness of the current job market and these two individuals have borne that out. i will add another thing quickly. i do some teaching, college level, the students are telling me they cannot find interviews. cheryl: having a tough time. i'm hearing the same thing. >> there is actually no jobs growth in finance. cheryl
cheryl: joining me now is lonski group president joan lonski, manhattan institute senior fellow allisonoth of them, john, especially with the job searches. what do you make of what they told us? >> whoo i can't help but think, how goodness we had 272,000 jobs added to payrolls in the month of may, let's not forget at the same time the number of people working fell by more than 400,000. on balance i think this is a weak job market. i'm going to mention one statistic, that is what is going...
0
0.0
Jun 20, 2024
06/24
by
FBC
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
joining us brian riedel, senior fellow at the manhattan institute and david malpass, former presidentthe world bank group. brian, i know you wrote about this in the "new york post" today. i mean i don't remember the exact phrase but the late economist herb stein used to say, you know if something is unsustainable, it won't be sustained or if something is bad it can't keep going on, or something like that. my point here, brian, is, with these horrendous numbers, with out of control big government finances out of control government spending and regulating there will be consequences. we may not see them this moment. there will be consequentials there is inflation risk, default risk, all kinds of risk. what do you think, brian? >> the interest costs and the interest rate risk is enormous. even under low interest rates interest costs have gone from 350 billion, when biden took office, to a trillion dollars by next year when it will be the second biggest item in the entire budget after social security and interest costs are going to $2 trillion a decade from now. that is the low interest ra
joining us brian riedel, senior fellow at the manhattan institute and david malpass, former presidentthe world bank group. brian, i know you wrote about this in the "new york post" today. i mean i don't remember the exact phrase but the late economist herb stein used to say, you know if something is unsustainable, it won't be sustained or if something is bad it can't keep going on, or something like that. my point here, brian, is, with these horrendous numbers, with out of control big...
0
0.0
Jun 15, 2024
06/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
institute, and national review contributing editor york times columnist and podcast toes. lulu garcia-navarro and author and conservative pollster, kristen sold us andrews and welcome back everyone kristen is the court's abortion pill decision a big deal are a little deal. >> it's a big deal in that it takes the issue not completely off the table, but had they ruled in a different way and we're this pill not available. >> this would be a massive political nickel firestorm for republicans in the fall. >> the fact that the supreme court ruled the way it did, and ruled unanimously. i think is very important because it will really take the heat off of a lot of these, especially senate candidates whose job would be to confirm justices. >> they were getting last a lot more questions about this issue that they probably don't want to answer. qarrah. >> it seems to me that there are two questions here. first, the policy question about access to abortion and then how the issue plays out on the campaign on both of those aspects is this decision a big deal are a little deal. >> i thin
institute, and national review contributing editor york times columnist and podcast toes. lulu garcia-navarro and author and conservative pollster, kristen sold us andrews and welcome back everyone kristen is the court's abortion pill decision a big deal are a little deal. >> it's a big deal in that it takes the issue not completely off the table, but had they ruled in a different way and we're this pill not available. >> this would be a massive political nickel firestorm for...
0
0.0
Jun 8, 2024
06/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
institute and national review, contributing editor, new york times journalist and podcast host lulu garcia-navarro. >> and editor in chief of the dispatch and columnist at the la times, jonah goldberg, welcome back, everyone. >> qarrah. yeah. so are there to tiers of justice as republicans, client? >> no, not at all. >> i think this is a sad case. i find this whole thing just reading about it, especially with the women testifying about him. this guy is a drug fact. he's a drug addict and he's he's troubled and he's probably going to lose here. and i find it more just a sad case of families in this country the polarization is seems odd because it's just sad to me right what about the argument that the fact that hunter biden is on trial shows that the justice system despite what republicans say, is in fact, even handan. well, i think that if it were really even handed, you might have seen prosecutors address the foreign agent registration act. think back to paul manafort who has stressed campaign manager the first time around before robert mueller came around and prosecuted manafort f
institute and national review, contributing editor, new york times journalist and podcast host lulu garcia-navarro. >> and editor in chief of the dispatch and columnist at the la times, jonah goldberg, welcome back, everyone. >> qarrah. yeah. so are there to tiers of justice as republicans, client? >> no, not at all. >> i think this is a sad case. i find this whole thing just reading about it, especially with the women testifying about him. this guy is a drug fact. he's...
0
0.0
Jun 1, 2024
06/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> here with me today, podcast der and author kara swisher, ri salam, president of the manhattan institute and national review, contributing editor new york times journalist and podcast host lulu garcia-navarro, author and conservative pollster. kristen's salt has anderson welcome back everyone. kristen, you've seen these reason polls. i just referred to words six to 7% of trump supporters said they might reconsider their support if he were convicted. >> can a convicted felon be elected president? how much has the developments this way? how much of they heard his chances of winning in november? >> well, we'll know a little bit next week when the first polls come out of the field, i'm a pollster. i loved to rely on that data. but even in the absence of that, i still feel pretty confident that, yes, a convicted felon, if it's donald trump, can still win election to or rather reelection as president, right now, when i look at polls, i see a lot of voters don't like donald trump personally. they don't think he's a good guy, but they still think he's better on the economy. the fact that he is n
. >> here with me today, podcast der and author kara swisher, ri salam, president of the manhattan institute and national review, contributing editor new york times journalist and podcast host lulu garcia-navarro, author and conservative pollster. kristen's salt has anderson welcome back everyone. kristen, you've seen these reason polls. i just referred to words six to 7% of trump supporters said they might reconsider their support if he were convicted. >> can a convicted felon be...
0
0.0
Jun 4, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> our last witness rafael manguel is a fellow at the manhattan institute. he's authored and coauthored a number of reports and op-eds on issues ranging from urban crime and jail violence to broader matters to civil justice reform. we appreciate being here today and look forward to your testimony. i will now recognize chief major for five minutes and what you're going to see it catches the suspect as he runs, flees the scene and i want to show you what happens next. so you'll see here in a moment there's a black suv that comes down the street and stops. there it is right now and it's going to stop in the corner. these -- and you see two women jump out of the suv because they have seen the suspect down the street. >> wow. >> you see the driver of the suv, a male help bring the suspect down and the fourth suspect or fourth individual came out of the backseat. all four of those individuals were capitol police officers. the first one who intercepted him, tall woman was deputy chief mitchell and inspector mendoza tackled national capitol region. it's a mutually b
. >> our last witness rafael manguel is a fellow at the manhattan institute. he's authored and coauthored a number of reports and op-eds on issues ranging from urban crime and jail violence to broader matters to civil justice reform. we appreciate being here today and look forward to your testimony. i will now recognize chief major for five minutes and what you're going to see it catches the suspect as he runs, flees the scene and i want to show you what happens next. so you'll see here...
0
0.0
Jun 11, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
>> first, thanks to you, manhattan institute, for having me.we have heather ,, you have those, i don't need anymore. it is a good question. i by was been politically interested for macro investing, you're politically adjacent to geopolitics. people ask me what is macro investing? we live at the edge of geopolitics, economics, and gravity. eventually gravity wins. for a long time i've been analyzing political situations, economic situations, and i just decided that 2023-20 24 is important for me to come out from behind my desk because i think we are at a very unique point here, and i would list three reasons, or threeam focuse u.s., i am alarmed by the size of these deficits and the spending. not have of tax collection problem, we have a spending problem. i've never really sn, well, we have never seen anything quite like this. i am in economic historian, and for better or worse, i can tell you what the budget deficit was deohnson in 1967 as a percent of gdp. is alarming in terms of the 6%-7% deficit during peacetime, during a non-recessionary ti
>> first, thanks to you, manhattan institute, for having me.we have heather ,, you have those, i don't need anymore. it is a good question. i by was been politically interested for macro investing, you're politically adjacent to geopolitics. people ask me what is macro investing? we live at the edge of geopolitics, economics, and gravity. eventually gravity wins. for a long time i've been analyzing political situations, economic situations, and i just decided that 2023-20 24 is important...
0
0.0
Jun 28, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
or i think even brian reedle, the manhattan institute has put together a updated deck of slides to make it easy to read. let's walk through a couple other things here. we actually work through part of this on the joint economic report but this one is basically straight off c.b.o., c.b.o. projects that net interest and mandatory program spending will exceed revenues. really should say receipts because revenues are something you earn, receipts are something you confiscate. but that's sort of -- will exceed revenues by $1,689,000,000 over the next 10 years. it's simply saying if you actually put in the mandatory programs and the interest we owe, it consumes every dollar of tax receipts. so if you come and say, david, tomorrow i need to you balance the budget. i can do it but you have to be prepared. you have no more military or government and we'll just do the earned entitlements and earned benefits and pay the interest back to our bondholders. that's reality. it's called math. so what else was in both the joint economic report and also backed up by congressional budget office this last we
or i think even brian reedle, the manhattan institute has put together a updated deck of slides to make it easy to read. let's walk through a couple other things here. we actually work through part of this on the joint economic report but this one is basically straight off c.b.o., c.b.o. projects that net interest and mandatory program spending will exceed revenues. really should say receipts because revenues are something you earn, receipts are something you confiscate. but that's sort of --...
0
0.0
Jun 2, 2024
06/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
john yoo, you see this case in manhattan. how bad is it for our nation? our electoral system? how bad is it for the rule of law, for federalism, the whole kit and caboodle ver projects tk you for having me back. i am saddened at what this case is now done our political and constitutional system. it is hard to exact the harm it is going to do. not just to donald trump. he is important for the more orton' is what is a stooge or institution as you said our legal system our electoral system our system of federalism and systems of power for all future presidents. for all future citizens. first, we have never prosecuted former president before. this is not because of passive presidents hapastpresidents hadg bad it is because we thought it was the best thing for our separation of powers to leave presidents alone. the constitution concentrates so much responsibility and authority and the president. to take care they are faithfully executed. to protect the country from threats. we do not want our president to make the hardest decisions on behalf of the country sho
john yoo, you see this case in manhattan. how bad is it for our nation? our electoral system? how bad is it for the rule of law, for federalism, the whole kit and caboodle ver projects tk you for having me back. i am saddened at what this case is now done our political and constitutional system. it is hard to exact the harm it is going to do. not just to donald trump. he is important for the more orton' is what is a stooge or institution as you said our legal system our electoral system our...
0
0.0
Jun 1, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
we keep talking about how the role of law how did or institutions held. what is the countermeasure against those threats? >> the countermeasure i think starts with our political leaders being responsible for what they say. we heard molly say you have other leaders that are being bullied into peddling what the former president said. for example the lies such as this case is against me because the prosecution gets the last word. donald trump may not have known the prosecutors get the last word in trials but i know a lot of the senators and congressmen better lawyers and a practice lawn of the prosecutors always get the last word, yet they are still out here sowing distrust in the system and the part that bothers me is one you would sit down and oppose these folks that storm the capital in 2021 coming to talk to them about why were you so enraged? why were you so mad? they would say if i can't believe my senator who said the election was stolen, and i can't believe a president who said the election was stolen, if i can't believe them, who can i trust? now we
we keep talking about how the role of law how did or institutions held. what is the countermeasure against those threats? >> the countermeasure i think starts with our political leaders being responsible for what they say. we heard molly say you have other leaders that are being bullied into peddling what the former president said. for example the lies such as this case is against me because the prosecution gets the last word. donald trump may not have known the prosecutors get the last...
0
0.0
Jun 12, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
nonetheless, we respect our government institutions and plan to appear voluntarily before the subcommittee after sentencing. >>> joining us now, neil, argued more than 50 cases before the supreme court. he is a professor at georgetown law, an msnbc legal analyst and host of the podcast court side. thank you so much for being here. so now, some republicans are pushing the hunter biden jury verdict as proof of a doj conspiracy. this is some kerry matheson red yarn over a cork board stuff. did you have that on your bingo card? >> it is almost impossible. the verdict today makes these conservative claims look ridiculous. for years these conservatives have been crowing about a politicized justice department. what happened today, the justice department convicted the president's own son. his only living son. imagine what that would take. the president gave you that job. you have the power as every attorney general does to end the prosecution. with the stroke of a pen. and you didn't do it. that's what the rule of law is all about. and, similarly, the constitution gives the president the power to
nonetheless, we respect our government institutions and plan to appear voluntarily before the subcommittee after sentencing. >>> joining us now, neil, argued more than 50 cases before the supreme court. he is a professor at georgetown law, an msnbc legal analyst and host of the podcast court side. thank you so much for being here. so now, some republicans are pushing the hunter biden jury verdict as proof of a doj conspiracy. this is some kerry matheson red yarn over a cork board...
0
0.0
Jun 11, 2024
06/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
bragg along with manhattan prosecutor michael colangelo will appear before congress july 12, just one from my metastatic breast cancer treatment. and with kisqali, i can have both. kisqali is a pill that when taken with an aromatase inhibitor helps delay cancer from growing and has been proven to help people live significantly longer across three separate clinical trials. so, i have the confidence to live my life. kisqali can cause lung problems or an abnormal heartbeat, which can lead to death. it can cause serious skin reactions, liver problems, and low white blood cell counts that may result in severe infections. avoid grapefruit during treatment. tell your doctor right away if you have new or worsening symptoms, including breathing problems, cough, chest pain, a change in your heartbeat, dizziness, yellowing of the skin or eyes, dark urine, tiredness, loss of appetite, abdomen pain, bleeding, bruising, fever, chills, or other symptoms of an infection, a severe or worsening rash, are or plan to become pregnant, or breastfeeding. long live life and long live you. ask your doctor abo
bragg along with manhattan prosecutor michael colangelo will appear before congress july 12, just one from my metastatic breast cancer treatment. and with kisqali, i can have both. kisqali is a pill that when taken with an aromatase inhibitor helps delay cancer from growing and has been proven to help people live significantly longer across three separate clinical trials. so, i have the confidence to live my life. kisqali can cause lung problems or an abnormal heartbeat, which can lead to...
0
0.0
Jun 13, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
when republicans line up in front of a manhattan courtenigrn the service of a now convicted felon, contemptuous is pulling the levers of trump's manhattan execution, that's contemptuous. but when the republicans defeign dig nation when he complies with his, that's condemn chewous and that is beneath this body and is vial and disgraceful and -- may i have an additional 30 seconds. that is deserving of our scorn and beneath the dignity of this body and vial and disgraduationful. those who bring this motion bring contempt all right but only upon themselves. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from new york reserves. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from california. mr. mcclintock: i yield three minutes to myself. mr. speaker, for the first time in american history a presidential administration is trying to jail its opponent. and not just any opponent, but a former president of the united states. to pursue this objective mr. bideoved an unprecedented ad raid on a former despite treen s objections by his career officials and the local field office that nor
when republicans line up in front of a manhattan courtenigrn the service of a now convicted felon, contemptuous is pulling the levers of trump's manhattan execution, that's contemptuous. but when the republicans defeign dig nation when he complies with his, that's condemn chewous and that is beneath this body and is vial and disgraceful and -- may i have an additional 30 seconds. that is deserving of our scorn and beneath the dignity of this body and vial and disgraduationful. those who bring...
0
0.0
Jun 1, 2024
06/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> but now in a look in this case, it has nothing to do with any kind of institutional longstanding injustice that is a separate question altogether issues, that were, at, stake in this trial. and i don't know if tim scott ever set foot in manhattan criminal court, but a prior to any anything related to this case. but the reality is that this is a business case. it's a business records case. it's a fraud case. it was an election interference case. it was hello, those things. >> the notion that the system is fundamentally unfair we're looking for the evidence. >> donald trump says the same thing over and over and over again. but your viewers should know that these questions were raised early on and they were handled within the court, within the context of the trial, the questions about bias, the questions about venue you the questions about what evidence could come in. we have a structured system and to the extent that it didn't work for donald trump, i understand. and being upset. >> but to then say that the whole system is wrong and that this somehow compares to the historic injust
. >> but now in a look in this case, it has nothing to do with any kind of institutional longstanding injustice that is a separate question altogether issues, that were, at, stake in this trial. and i don't know if tim scott ever set foot in manhattan criminal court, but a prior to any anything related to this case. but the reality is that this is a business case. it's a business records case. it's a fraud case. it was an election interference case. it was hello, those things. >>...
0
0.0
Jun 4, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
just losing yourself and losing any sense of right or wrong in the process, but here, denigrating the institution of justice. making the false claims, the patently false claims that this trial in manhattan was somehow about keeping donald trump out of the campaign trail. something the speaker knows is patently false but is willing to repeat. and this is where we are, where our highest ranking official, republican official is essentially telling the american people, don't trust our system of justice. don't trust the rule of law. and here on this committee, we see something very similar. we see a republican u.s. attorney brought on to investigate the president, we see him make a report to this congress that there was nothing prosecutable, what he was able to find. we see him, at the same time, failing to make a prosecutable case, deciding the next best thing he can do is lob a political grenade in this report and politically a little the president. and we see this committee unable , after months and months and months to make any kind of impeachable case, deciding to follow mr. hurr's example. there
just losing yourself and losing any sense of right or wrong in the process, but here, denigrating the institution of justice. making the false claims, the patently false claims that this trial in manhattan was somehow about keeping donald trump out of the campaign trail. something the speaker knows is patently false but is willing to repeat. and this is where we are, where our highest ranking official, republican official is essentially telling the american people, don't trust our system of...
0
0.0
Jun 4, 2024
06/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
not just in the process but here denigrating the very institution of justice. a something the speaker knows is false but willing to repeat and this is where we are on the highest ranking official republican officials is essentially telling the american people don't trust the system of justice. we see something very similar. we see a republican u.s. attorney brought on to investigate the president and we see him make a report to the congress that there's nothing prosecutable and what he was able to find we see him at the same time failing to make a prosecuted case deciding the next best thing he can do is lob a political great into the report and belittle the president. .. and why? because her public on this committee have moved from being in the criminal defense firm for the president to being essentially an adjunct of the president's media advertising firm. they want the video for donald trump's campaign commercials. that is where this committee has become the committee on the judiciary. they committee that is centered are supposed to be centered on the rule o
not just in the process but here denigrating the very institution of justice. a something the speaker knows is false but willing to repeat and this is where we are on the highest ranking official republican officials is essentially telling the american people don't trust the system of justice. we see something very similar. we see a republican u.s. attorney brought on to investigate the president and we see him make a report to the congress that there's nothing prosecutable and what he was able...