. >> we continue the conversation on "newsmakers" with jeff reyoung, health care reporter or "the hill" newspaper. how is this going to be paid for? what did you learn? >> the first thing, i would bet the over on $1 trillion over 10 years, despite what the congressman said. they've got a large program of subsidies for people to buy insurance, they have a big extension of medicaid and improvements to medicare, it's an expensive bill, it'll be over $1 trillion, and they're still struggling with ways to pay for it. >> if i could continue that, that guess is substantiated by what's happened on the senate side. the pieces of legislation aren't the same but two different senate committees have been communicating with the congressional budget office to figure out how to cover everything. most of the must be is expanding coverage to at least some portion of the 40-something million people who don't have insurance. those scores are coming back at more than $1 trillion. on the cost side of it, i can't imagine the house bill would cost less than that. they may write deeper cuts to medicare and me