reporter: jay sekulow who represents 41 plaintiffs who were targeted by the irs for extra scrutiny, said he had to amend his lawsuit many times already, every time he amend it, damaging new information comes out that forces him to amend it yet again. these emails potentially raise a new question. i asked one question, why? why would you send those documents to your personal email account? now, i could be sinister which i don t think is being sinister at all, are you sharing those with people who shouldn t have access to them and you didn t want to send them through your government account? reporter: lerner s lawyer said this could be granted if they grant her immunity from prosecution. the committee needs to know more about what she has to say before that can happen. jenna: doug, thank you. jon: concerns are growing over the effects of obamacare will have on millions of americans and while the sweeping reform will touch everyone in this
$6350 a year, trace that for a married couple but now that limit has been ited why? well, basically what the administration is figuring out is that they don t, there is not a simple way of knowing, having enough information about how much you re actually spending. which lead to a whole huge massive problem with obamacare and that is, the amount of personal information that the federal government need to vacuum up about personal medical information no less, about every single individual in the country who is on obamacare in order for obamacare to be sort of carried out properly and that s why they have to sort of delay this for another year. the funny thing about it, this goes to show what happens when congress pass as law they didn t read before they passed it. jon: we have to pass it to find out what is in, right, joe? that s right. the reason is, the insurers kept telling the administration
help pay off her debt. a judge approving the agreement in papers made public this week. anthony was aqised, of course, two years ago in the death of her daughter, caylee. jon: well, the battle over health care rages on as house republicans are set to vote for the 40th time today to cripple obamacare. they are debating the measure right now. it would stop the irs from implementing any part of the president s signature law. the bill not expected to get past the house, but it comes as democrats and republicans are planning massive publicity campaigns for and against the law depending on their particular point of view. chris freights is a national correspondent for the national journal. chris, the republicans have the votes to prevent the irs from implementing obamacare. not a lot of support for the irs among the american taxpayer these days especially. but will this go anywhere, today s vote? well, jon, i think that s the question, and the answer is, no.
will be shocked that a government program is coming in over budget. [laughter] it s a typical story. and so, yeah, it s probably happening in this case as well. reporter: but even critics explain that the supreme court decision which said the federal government could not force the states to expand medicaid to 138% of poverty will push a lot more people onto the exchanges. the administration thought they were going to push a lot of people into medicaid. in fact, half the newly insured under obamacare are supposed to be in medicaid. reporter: medicaid, of course, is health care for the poor. according to kaiser, 21 states have refused to expand the program with six more debating it, 24 will expand in part because the federal government will pay 100% of the cost for the first three years. jon: and then what happens after three years? reporter: well, it goes down, but it never gets below 90% which is why some argue the states come out ahead if they go ahead and expand it.
that she hit her head then. there is no word whether or not that fall a few years ago had anything to do with reportedly suffering some seizure-type symptoms before being rushed to the hospital. no word exactly what happened with this particular incident but friends and family members say in general in recent years she has been in good health some this is a surprise and a shock to the people that are most close to her. jon: molly line, live in boston. molly, thank you. jenna: well now to some news out of d.c. brand new setback for obamacare today. the administration now admitting there is no way to verify eligibility for a subsidy. so the irs is being told to just take your word for it. if you say you qualify for a subsidy for health care, you qualify for a tax break and there is not a system really that is going to check what you say. the new rules are being revealed just days after the employer mandate, a central component of the law was delayed for another year until 2015. both of t