Today on Inside Politics, a giant of the u. S. Senate has died. Well talk all about Dianne Feinsteins passing, more important ly, her legacy in minutes. But were going to start this hour with Breaking News on capitol hill. As we speak, we are watching a critical vote to avert a Government Shutdown. I want go straight to manu raju to give us the latest of what were seeing on the house floor. Reporter theres a procedural vote right now to advance the republicanled effort to keep the government open for about a month. This procedural vote, they have the votes to advance it to the final vote. That doesnt mean this is good news for the speakerer. In fact, a number of these members opposed to the speakers Spending Plans made clear that they are okay voting Going Forward on this procedural vote, but they plan to vote no and sink the bill to keep the government open for a handful of weeks because of their opposition of the way the issues have been handled here and the demands to move forward with longer term funding bills, meaning congress could be staring at a Government Shutdown by Sunday Morning because of this impass. The question for the speaker all along is what is next. He is still trying to get the votes for the republicanled bill. He refuses to entertain publicly or privately to some of his colleagues what he will do if the bill collapse this afternoon, which pretty much everybody here on capitol hill expects. Whether he will cut a deal with democrats. I i asked the speaker why not cut a deal with democrats a the this moment. He had some strong words saying that he is not ready to surrender. Its easy to vender. If you want to surrender, yeah, but if i want to fight to secure or borders and keep government open, how is that a problem . Its only for cnn that becomes a problem that i dont vender to the liberals. What i want to do is stand for america. Part of this bill that includes spending cuts, democrats will not accept. The speaker has yet to try to cut a deal with Senate Democrats and the white house, as hes tried to get republicans online. One big reason why are warning from his far right flank if he were to cut a bipartisan deal, that could be enough to sink him out of the speakership and call for a vote for his ouster. The speaker has consistently down played thats been part of his caollation, but theres no question about it. Thats hovering over the speaker at this moment. And in a clear sign that republicans expect this key vote in the afternoon to fail to keep the government open, even as the procedural vote succeeded, they expect the underlying bill to fail. The house gop plans to meet Behind Closed Doors to talk about their way forward. They would not be having that meet figure they had the votes to succeed. So a lot of moving parts here as so much is hanging, so many people are watching to see what washington does as a Government Shutdown seems more real by the moment. It sure does. Thank you so much. And talking about the stakes here. And the High Wire Act that Kevin Mccarthy is walking right now. Appreciate it. Get back to us if you hear any developments. Now we want to turn to toughness that did not come in a pinstripe suit. There are flags flying at half staff across pennsylvania avenue, as the country reckons with the loss of one of the great ones. California senator Dianne Feinstein passed away at age 90. Today on the senate floor, a Moment Of Silence and palpable grief. Lord, we pause to thank you for the life and legacy of senator Dianne Feinstein. May her death teach us to number our days that we may have hearts of wisdom. The senators desk is drape ed in black. The site moved her colleague Chuck Schumer to tears. To so today we grieve, we look at that desk, and we know what we have lost. Those flowers will fade, but not the permanent imprint Dianne Feinstein left on the u. S. Senate and well beyond. We learned of her death shortly before 9 00 a. M. In the hours since, tribute after tribute centered on one word. Trail blazeer. The list of her career is very long. The first woman to serve as San Francisco mayor, the first woman elected to the senate from california, the first woman to sit on the Senate Judiciary committee, the first woman to chair the rules committee, and cochair the inaugural committee and the first woman ever to chair the Important SenateIntelligence Committee. Feinstein was without a doubt an american original, whose career was powered i by the pain of a tragedy she said she could never unsee. The lifeless body of one of the first openly gay politicians in America Harvey milk. The door to the office came dm. I heard the door slam. I heard the shots. He whisked by. I walked Down The Line of Supervisor Offices and found harvey milk, put my finger in a bullet hole trying to get a pulse. It was the first person and that began a saga. I became mayor as a product of assassination of the first openly gay public official being killed by a friend and colleague of mine. Feinstein told me in that 2017 interview 25 years after she first made it to the senate in 1992, and every day she said she came to work, tryied honor her friend. In 1994, penned the assault weapons ban. Guns and tried to stop them from spreading to every corner of every American Street became a common theme for her in her time in washington. Everybody says i dont know. Let me tell you. I have seen assassination. I have seen killing. I have been a mayor. I know what these guns can do. Why is it every man comes before me and says, nice lady, you really dont know. You saw feinstein was really no nonsense, a dogged advocate for her causes. She held her own government to account, namely the Central Intelligence agency. The entire Intelligence Community. Feinstein built bridges too. In her own party, most famously hosting a smooth things over summit for barack obama and Hillary Clinton after their long and butter president ial primary. She talked often about the isolation of partisan shin that pervade this town brings. This is a lonely place. Washington is a hard place. It is the most partisan place i certainly have been in. And theres a mean edge to that partisanship. Our solidarity. Our ability to breakthrough it, our ability to be human in each others company, i knits a kind of bond that sets an example. Feinsteins commitment to service ran through her core. Case in point, her last vote was yesterday morning. Lets go to the white house now and mj lee is covering the president , who before he was president , was a Longtime Senate colleague of the now late senator Dianne Feinstein. What did the president say . For president biden, this is the loss of not just a longtime colleague, but a dear friend. The two served together for many years in the senate, including on the Judiciary Committee, and the president has spoken openly about the close friendship that he and First Lady Jill Biden developed over the years with the late senator and her late husband. We did just moments ago hear drektly from the president paying brief tribute to the late senator before a military ceremony. These are the words he used to describe and talk about the late senator. She was an historic figure, a trailblazer for women, and a great friend. She made her in everything from National Security to the environment, gun safety to protecting civil liberties. The country is going to miss her dearly. So will jill and i. Now we were told that the president was informed about Dianne Feinsteins death earlier this morning by senior advisers. We also know the president had had tried to reach out to the late senator last month in august. The two didnt end up connect i ing, but he did speak with the late senators senior aid and asked that his admiration for his friend be passed on to the late senator. We also know that the white house has been treading carefully when it comes to questions that they have been asked about Senator Feinsteins age and health and her potential replacement. So Going Forward, we certainly do not expect the white house to publicly weigh in in any way on questions about filling her vacancy before right now the flags here at the white house have been lowered in tribute to the late senator Dianne Feinstein. Thank you so much for that. Here to share their insights and memories with Senator Feinstein is gloria borger, david chalian, and jeff zeleny. Gloria, you spent a lot of time with Senator Feinstein. I did. She was one of a kind. I have to tell you, she was endlessly curious. She was interested in what other people were saying about what was going on in the senate, and for some reason, i became part of a group of women she used to have an aid call to ask us to have dinner about once every month or six weeks, and wed go to this perfectly set up dinner at a cafe in washington at a conscious table with beautiful flowers. And off the record, but it was not only a discussion it wasnt really about what was going on in the Intelligence Committee, of which she was chairman, it was about sort of the events of the day, how are you, whats going on in your news organization, there was a little bit of gossip in there. But such a gracious hostess, you got this feeling she just wanted to bring people in. She lived in this Big House In Washington and her husband was very often in california. And maybe she just wanted to have some good conversation and friendships. And the fact that she so often reached out to female reporters and colleagues and that says a lot. Jeff zeleny, before you were an Ace Television reporter, you were an ace front reporter at the new york times. And i mentioned the fact that there was this summit that Senator Feinstein brokered, which was a big deal back in 2008 after the primary season. You broke that story. I want to read a little bit about what you wrote back then. Before senator Hillary Clinton stepped forward to endorse senator obama, which she is scheduled to do here on saturday, they came together for a private reconciliation on neutral turf, The Living Room of senator Dianne Feinsteins home. It was extraordinary at the time because it was two days after the final round of primaries ended. Just a couple days before then senator clinton would endorse. And with all remember how that campaign was at the end. It was very raw. So without that meeting, you wonder, would that door ever opened and become Secretary Of State or would he have froezen her out . But that meeting over a glass of water in the senators living room, she was upstairs in her study. She said she wasnt listening in, but you have to wonder about that. But the reality was that meeting, and she endorsed senator clinton. But she knew senator obama a bit, but he was brand new to the senate basically. And they had only served a short time. But as she talked to reporters about it the next day, she said there were some Nerve Endings that needed to come together. At her core, she was a Democratic Party stall worth. So that was certainly a very important meeting. But in terms of what she did in the senate, she would later go on to challenge the Obama Administration forcefully on the cia on torture. So it was a nice meeting, but she was much more substantiatetive than just hosting meetings. You can connect what you were talking about about convening women around the table to that meeting with Secretary Clinton and obama, jeff notes she was a clinton supporter, but remember in that primary, there was this real concern in the Democratic Party about female voters being sort of having dampened enthusiasm that the person being the first female democrat you can nominee would fall short in this. So again, i just think her you get elected in something that got called the year of the woman in 1992. Joe biden courts you and feinstein to get on the committee in the aftermath of those hearings, what she stands for in Women Advancement in politics and women empowerment, i think, will be really a key part of her legacy. I think that part of her bio was part of why she was the right person to convene that meeting. Such a good point. As i precinct you in, you mentioned the year of the woman. 1992, it was a lonely place for women. It was a little lonely after 92, but less so. Before Senator Feinstein was elected in 1992, it was just three women in the United States senate. Afterwards you had six. I want to compare to today, 24. Not 50, but its not 3 or 6. And 125 women in the house now. Its easy to take this legacy for granted, as we walk through the halls of power now and see so many women. She had to deal with an overt sexism that would not stand today. She was not a quitter. She ran and lost in many elections, but kept going. So we are now benefitting from that legacy. Is and it is size to take that for granted. One more thing about her. She defined herself, everyone saw her as a zent rhys. And thats sometimes got democrats maed and she faced primary opponents, but she always would say she was a pragmatist, not just a centrist, which is why she could be somebody who defended the cia so much, but then could also taken the cia over torture and release over 6,000page report, which talked about how detainees were treated and she said it was a stain on our values and our history. So she was one of these senators that wasnt so predictable all the time. And got herself in some trouble. But she refused to be labeled one way or another. She took on the Obama Administration. Her fellow democrats and pushed her to release that. She was pretty upset about the intelligence she saw she felt she was misled about. Thank you for your recollections. Coming up on Inside Politics, much more on the legacy of senator Dianne Feinstein. Im going to talk with two of her Longtime Senate colleagues. This hour the House Speaker notched an important win on a procedural vote to avoid a shutdown. Republican hardliners held for now. This is key. It doesnt mean its headed for smooth sailing. When the government will be able to stop paying bills. The panel is back with us now. Thats critical. I want to refer to what manu said at the top of the show. This is an intentional strategy by the republican hardliners to say, yes, on this procedural vote which would have kept the government running. And support this shutdown. Thats why were seeing Congressman Gaetz say this is about curtailing spending, but really, he knows the reality. He knows that democrats control the white house and the senate and mccarthy has done all he can, but its really about the politics. Its about illustrating that youre a fire brand and firmly in trumps camp, youre following trumps orders. Thats why we see the situation that were in. This is just something to show mccarthy, but its not going to make a difference in the end. They have a long way to go. I doubt youre going to say smooth sailing and, but i think its worth noting. If indeed on the actual Stopgap Measure to keep the government open, if that fails, if theres enough republicans that vote against that, that is because Kevin Mccarthy is pursuing a strategy to do this with republicans. Because hes looking for his own survival as speaker. He could get a Stopgap Measure passed potentially with a bipartisan product that would be democratic, but it would ensure his demise as speaker of the house. So thats why were in this pickle that were in right now. Hes going to lose republicans no matter what. He puts himself in great political jeopardy losing his job. The question that i have is the democrats, because there are a lot of democrats who are mad at Kevin Mccarthy dont want to save Him Buzz He 0e7 opened an impeachment inquiry. These things are all kind of related. While they want to keep the government open, they are not interested in doing the guy any favors right now. So the democrats have to figure out where they come out on this. And i dont know the answer to that yet. I dont think the democrats have an answer. I think youre right. Politically speaking, this is one area where democrats agree 06 most people is going to say washington and blame everybody. Its likely that republicans will get most of the blame. And thats something that the president is trying to flames that the president is trying to fan and he did so again this morning. The house fails to ful fill its most basic function by tomorrow, it will have failed o all our troops, our Service Members will keep upholding their oath, showing up for work, standing central around the world, keeping our country secure, but they wont get paid. Its a gis grace. Hes trying to brand this as their shutdown. And in a sense, thats right. He cut a deal earlier this year with the speaker. The reality is i think no one will emerge great with this, but republicans certainly will get more of the blame. Thats certainly what former Newt Gingrich thinks. He believes that shutdowns are not good. But what does he know about shutdowns . But the better question now probably is how it gets reopened. We have had more experience with shutdowns in recent years than in the course of history. And the question is how long is it going to be . If its a couple days, well figure about this. If its a month, that is a much bigger problem. And then the people in america start seeing things and reflecting their anger on members of congress. So the bigger question now probably is, how does this get back open and is it worth s sacrificing your speakership for. Sol of the hourly wage workers are not eligible for back pay. Conservatives want to make this argument they are for the american worker. If they push this shutdown, it flies in the face of that argument. Really good point. Everybody, standby. Were going to talk to two of Dianne Feinsteins longtime colleagues, Senators Amy Klobuchar and chris coons are going to talk about her legacy, next. Thank you, mr. Speaker, for the purpose of speaking with Great Sadness and emotion about the loss of our great senator from california senator Dianne Feinstein. I do so, as a friend, neighbor and fellow San Franciscoen, all of us do so with great pride as the great senator, she has been to our state the longest serving woman senator from california. That was House Speaker nancy pelosi voupd by members of the California Congressional Delegation paying tribute to her longtime friend and congressional colleague Dianne Feinstein. Joining me now to talk about her colleague and friend, democratic senator Amy Klobuchar of minnesota. Thank you so much for coming in to talk about senator Dianne Feinstein. You served with her on the Senate Judiciary committee. And you really got to know her and to understand the power and the legacy that were talking about this morning. She was a trailblazer. I was thinking about when she first came in in the year of the woman in 1992, so few women. Now were over 25 of the senate. And listening this morning on the senate floor as people like patty murray, susan collins, now heading up the Appropriations Committee together, she was a mentor to them. She was a mentor to me. She taught me that when youre a senator, you better have your act together. You better know the details. One of my fondest memories is staying overnight at her house in San Francisco after a political event. She invite d me to stay there. At 7 30 in the morning summoned me. She was sitting up in bed with these fuzzy slippers on reading the draft Patent Reform Act and started as a young member of the Judiciary Committee. Shes quizzing me on various parts of it. She got ahead because of true grit and her fierceness. She was not one to be that emotional all the time. Ill be honest. She was one to base her decisions on facts and one to actually lead by example. Thats what she did for so many women. When youre a trailblazer, you cant afford to be emotional. Thats right. Not a lot of tears. Then its already hard enough. I dont need to tell you. Thats one thing. The other thing that im thinking about as part of that story is that she was the first woman appointed to the ju dish nar committee. She was not an attorney, which you do have nonattorneys on the committee, but its a lot harder. Exactly. For awhile it was Just The Two Of Us on there. And i think part of this was what drove her into office. She was a San Francisco city council member, horrible assassination on the mayor and harvey milk. Shes one that announces it to the nation and then ends up as mayor. So the assault weapon ban, she was ahead of her time. So that kind of work drove her to be part of the Judiciary Committee because she could use that as a platform to get her bills passed. You mentioned this. I want to put it up so it really sinks in for our viewers. Just the difference between then and now when it comes to female representization in the u. S. Senate. She was elected in the year of the woman in 92. Before she came in, there were three. After she came in, there were six. You are one of 24 women, thats not 50, but its not 3. How did she mentor you and sort of show you the ropes not just as a senator, but as a female senator . She had this Vennhouse Spirit she was always looking out for people. She had some wealth on her own. Some of us would come in driving our saturn across the country. She would help us in knowing what the rules were at the senate. She was a stickler on dress. And it was noted today by senator murkowski on the floor of how senator Dianne Feinstein would have believed in a dress code. I know that because i took over the rules committee. We were both the only women that have ever chaired it. She would talk to me about this often. But at one point, she told me that the suit day was coming up. We dont wear a lot of sucker suits in minnesota. She called to get my measurements. And she did for many women senators, she actually bought us a sere sucker suit. And when i look at that suit hanging in my closet, i think she did that for me. She got one for Hillary Clinton at one point too. That was her thing. I love that. I know you have to get back for votes, but as you do, i want to put this up. This is she was very artistic. This is a painting that she made. I was lucky enough to get this from her when i visited her in San Francisco. Its called washington spring. I know you have one of these too. This is another Interest Aspect of her life. She was an incredible woman. Were going to miss her. Thank you for coming in. Now were going to be joined by another one of Dianne Feinsteins colleagues, senator chris coons of delaware. Senator, thank you so much for coming on with me. I know you have a lot of fond memories of Dianne Feinstein. I do. Thank you so much for giving her the respect, the honor that shes due. Senator Dianne Feinstein was someone who was first elected to the senate when i was a law student. And i follow the arc of her leadership here closely. I had a chance to meet her. I never malked would get to serve alongside her on both the Appropriations Committee and the Judiciary Committee. But when i i got here 13 years ago, Senator Feinstein was in fine form. She was gracious and dignified. She was proper. She was always prepared. She was also fierce, determined, incredibly capable. As you have heard several colleagues say on the floor this morning, she engaged in important fights defending the prerogatives of the senate against the cia in the fight over torture. Standing up for the interests of her home state of california on a wide range of interests, and fighting for wum. Being someone who worked hard to pass the violence against women act, someone who was not just a trailblazer, but a door opener for so many others who followed behind her. Senator murray, who is now the president pro tem of the senate, was also elected with her in the year of the woman back in 1992. And its a reminder of just what a transformation she helped bring to this body, to the senate, and to our country. The last thing i will mention is she was very close to my predecessor, then senator joe biden he was the chairman of the Judiciary Committee and worked hard to welcome her and recruit her on to the committee. And Senator Feinstein shared with me a number of privately funny stories about her service with chairman biden. The things they agreed on, the things they disagreed on, she had a real soft spot for him she was the person who had no enemies. Even if folks disagreed with her as a matter of policy, i was on the floor talking to some of the most senior and seasoned republican senators. Every single one of them had a story about her graciousness, her thoughtfulness, her ge generosity, hosting them in her home, telling jokes with them on the floor of the senate, even as she fought fiercely for the things she believed in. Its such an all of the points you just made are so important to remember as part of Senator Feinsteins legacy, but the last one, people looking from the outside in think thats a time gone by to be able to disagree without being disagreeable. That does still exist, it just doesnt get as much of a spotlight, as maybe it should. One of the things you mentioned was the fact that she fought very hard to get the Intelligence Report about the enhanced interrogation, the Torture Report released. She fought her own democratic president and she was chairman of the Senate Intelligence committee they were not happy about it. But she did it she felt it was important for transparency for the american people. Senator feinstein believed deeply in democracy. She believed in the importance of openness, of our citizens and constituents knowing whats happening. Thats a tough position to take as the chairman of the Intelligence Committee in a deep disagreement with the Intelligence Community over the conduct of a particular aspect of The War In Iraq and of the war on terror. It had significant contisequenc. I think that was, in some ways, among her finest moment heres in the senate, showing toughness and persistence in fighting for the prerogatives of the senate. She also is largely responsible for passing the assault weapons ban. Something that was unthinkable when she came here, but because of her own personal experience with the assassination of harvey milk that catapulted her to a position of leadership as mayor of San Francisco, she spoke movingly and repeatedly, it was one of the first things she talked to me about in a very gracious but forceful way. Soliciting me to join as a cosponsor of her attempt to reenact it. Something she never backed off from, was very engaged in and pur purposeful. I know you have to get to the floor for votes. Really appreciate you coming on and talking about your friend senator Dianne Feinstein. Thank you. Up next, Dianne Feinstein was nothing if not a bad ass. My look at her life and Lasting Impact in california and here in washington. It started with a Question Back in december of 2014. You know your wife is a bad ass, right . That was a question i asked the husband of senator Dianne Feinstein. He wasnt sure it was a compliment, but it was. And the question helped to form the foundation for a series of profiles about the barrier breaking women here in washington. The late senator was the only choice to go first. Senator Dianne Feinstein, this was 2017. The door to the Office Opened and he came in. Heard the door slam. I heard the shots. I smelled it. He whisk ed by. I walked Down The Line of supervisors offices and found harvey milk put my finger in a bullet hole trying to get a pulse. It was the first person i had ever seen shot to death. And that began a saga. I covered Dianne Feinstein for many years and she rarely talks about that traumatic day 40 years ago. But looking back, that tragedy put her on an unexpected path to becoming the icon she is now, from first female mayor of San Francisco to californias first female United States senator. Probably fair to say most women graduating from stanford in the 1950s were focused on finding a husband and having a family. You wanted to go into politics. Did people think you were crazy . Yeah, something must be wrong with her. She must have a bad marriage. Why is she doing this . People said that to you . Oh, yeah. Being a woman in our society, even today, is difficult. You know it in the press area. I know it in the political area. 47 years ago, feinstein won a local election that led her here. The chair of the president of the Board Of Supervisors in San Francisco. There are a lot of people who didnt think it was right for her to take this seat because she was a woman. She ran for mayor twice in the 1970s but lost both times. Then tragedy put her in the job. I became mayor as a product of assassination. Of the mayor being killed and the first openly gay public official being killed by a friend and colleague of mine. That friend was dan white, who shot and killed the mayor and hearth veto milk, one of the first openly gay elected officials in america. This was harvey milks desk. This is where he sat. Dan white, the man who shot and killed him, sat right next to him. I have seen reports that you said that you always think maybe i could have stopped it. I was a friend of dans. And i tried to mentor him. He was a former police officer, a former firefighter. Very goodlooking, young, robust i never really talk about this. Dan had resigned and then wanted the seat back, and so he had an appointment with the mayor and he walked into the office and he shot him a number of times. Both mayor mosconi and supervisor harvey milk have been shot. That was the most painful lesson of division in what i do is i really try to bring people together. Try to work out problems. She became acting mayor. When you were mayor and there was a fire over three alarms i had a radio in my room. My bedroom. When a building would burn and everybody was out on the sidewalk, i went and introduced them to the red cross. Theyll get you a place to stay. Politics was not gender neutral. Like the time a Developer Bet her, if he finished a project on time, she would have to wear a bathing suit in public. She took the bet and he won. This is the picture. This is the bikini. I have to say, you rocked that pretty well. She kept her mementos and pictures in a special room inside her San Francisco home. So there are a lot of stories here. This is the queen. Pope john paul. Joe montana. She was in the running to be walter mondales running mandate. He picked another woman, geraldine ferraro. They thought i was going to get it. The blond won out. This was going to be the cover. It didnt happen that way. Why didnt you ever run for president . I dont know. I felt i would never be elected. See, look how hard it is. Look at hillary. Look at what shes gone through. Youve done hard before. Yeah. Ive done hard before but its not a bad thing being in the senate. And shes done a lot that shes proud of. High on the list is gun control. Let me tell you, ive seen assassination. Ive seen killing. I know what these guns can do. She racked up a lot more firsts as a woman. First female member of the Senate Judiciary committee and first female chair of the Intelligence Committee. And ill never forget that dramatic moment in 2014 when she defied president obama, the leader of her own party, by going to the senate floor and releasing a Torture Report obama did not want public. It was an investigation that she oversaw and she wanted the public to see it. History will judge us by our commitment to a just society governed by law, and the willingness to face an ugly truth and say never again. There was some flak. Yeah. One of your colleagues from california, republican congressman jeff duncan said you were as much a traitor to this country as edward snowden. Well, he had a bad day. But you obviously, you stood up and you did what you thought was right. Thats right. And thats what we have to do. Thats what im there to do. Its not always easy. Its hard. United states senator Dianne Feinstein. People watching this, people looking at you will be shocked to know that you are the oldest serving u. S. Senator. Rub it in im not. The opposite. Its what im meant to do. As long as the old bean holds up. Im from the generation where we dropped under our desks. For people out there saying i want to be Dianne Feinstein, i want to do what she did. Run but prepare yourselves. So many times talented young women go for the top first. You cant do that. Start young. Earn your spurs. You dont drop out. You take defeat after defeat after defeat but you keep going. And i really believe that. As you just heard there, Senator Feinstein was always aware of her legacy but careful about letting others define her. Here she was right after she was first elected to the senate in 1992. I think it is wrong to say a womans vote. I won in california in a big state with 5. 5 million votes. I won by 17 margin. I won among men. I won among women. I won in every age level. I won in every ethnic group. What that says is that to me, the fact that im a woman is there but its incidental. I think people believe i can be an effective United States senator. Senator Dianne Feinstein, dead at the age of 90. Being remembered all over the country, All Over The World Today with her remarkable legacy. May her memory be a blessing. Thank you so much for joining us on Inside Politics today. Youre probably not easily persuaded to switch mobile providers for your business. But what if we told you its possible that comcast Business Mobile can save you up to 75 a year on your wireless bill versus the big three carriers . Its true. Plus, when you buy your first line of mobile, you get a second line free. There are no Term Contracts or line activation fees. And you can bring your own device. Oh, and all on the most reliable 5g Mobile Network nationwide. Wireless that works for you. Its not just possible. Its happening. The power goes out and we still have wifi to do our homework. And thats a good thing