officials and other colleagues trying to understand what the implications were. so i am going back to the hill today, going to meet with a lot of of my colleagues and get to where we need to go. i know we have to pay our bills. that is probably the most overriding thing driving me. but as i said yesterday, there are parts of this bill that i would not vote for if they were a free standing bill. the whole process is not one that is the way that the government should operate. we need regular order. that to me, congresswoman, sounds like a reluctant yes at this point. am i reading that right? i am not going to tell you one way or the other because i am going to keep asking questions and if i learn anything that s very disturbing today, i will have you know, i want to understand how precedent setting this bill is. how will this impact future bills? what are the domestic spending cuts, what are the programs really going to cut? are seniors going to be hurt. real questions th
environmental impact on this bill deep by disturbs me. by the way, as a mid-westerner, the things to keep being given are helping the coastals, helping i want to make sure that my midwest and that the auto industry and transportation and mobility don t keep paying a price as people give things to one sector and ignore the midwest. and that worries me as well. let s talk about the environmental impact on all of this and what it means for energy at large because this proposed streamlining what was really landmark legislative accomplishment that the national environmental policy act. your husband, former congressman john dingell, worked for years to get this passed. you let a led a resolution impose roll backs to it this. the way this is framed by some conservatives is that it will streamline within one to two
the fourth special election congressional loss. but, obviously, it s not just that. it s that republicans have had control of the house and senate for several years. republicans have controlled the white house. i want you to listen to what congressman tim ryan told don lemon earlier this week. you think nancy pelosi is more toxic than donald trump? you know what? the honest answer is in some areas of the country, yes, she is. that s the honest answer. tim ryan is my good friend, real friend not a political friend, fellow mid westerner. nancy pelosi is a phenomenal leader. has everything been perfect? no. she s created vice chair positions for hakim jeffriess and others. she s formidable, raising over half a million dollars for the party, been more inclusive. who would have thought she would have listened to me and put a muslim on the intelligence
and then boom watergate fell upon him. in this case we have donald trump almost from day one of his administration being besieged by this massive russia-gate problem since there s no other problem, we want to say if there is collusion with russia. but it s terrible. he just doesn t seem to know how to get away from it. he s made so many errors in tweets, statements. he now is really seeming like somebody who is being bought and sold out of moscow. and if that s not the case he s got to prove to the american people that he had nothing to do with colluding with russia during the 2016 election. i just don t think he took all this as seriously as he needed to and try to talk his way out and now it is a watergate-like situation and impeachment is in the air. like gerald ford kind of a mild mannered mid-westerner from