harry steen same question. >> i think you saw a definite commitment to what i guess you could call taxorm although when you look at the cost of these plans anywhere from 2-10 trillion over the first ten years alone debending on which plan and estimates you are using it's giant tax cuts than today's serious tax reform. the biggest things they all have in common is huge tax cuts at the top and wealthy individuals and corporations and what is interesting is it seems to be a price of admission for running for president with the republican donor class all of the candidates have this in common but when you actually look at the polling of normal republican voters, only about one in five republican voters think that wealthy people are paying too much taxes and this is not a position contrary i think to conventional wisdom that republican voters hold. >> fredico did we learn anything new about the approaches or proposals to economic questions? the earlier debates were kind of all over the place, but this one was meant to really zero in on questions of earning, spending, paying. >> well, there w